Untitled - Departamento de Educación

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Untitled - Departamento de Educación

1
CO CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES OF GENDER EQUITY
ENGLISH PROGRAM
December 2015
All Reserved Rights
Law Established by the
Department of Education
This manual has been designed exclusively for educational purposes.
Prohibited duplication and use for commercial intent.
iii
NOTIFICACIÓN DE POLÍTICA PÚBLICA
El Departamento de Educación no discrimina de
ninguna manera por razón de edad, raza, color, sexo,
nacimiento, condición de veterano, ideología política o
religiosa, origen o condición social, orientación sexual
o identidad de género, discapacidad o impedimento
físico o mental; ni por ser víctima de violencia
doméstica, agresión sexual o acecho.
iv
Message by the Secretary
v
Message from the Office of Women Affairs
vi
Editors
Rafael Román Meléndez
Secretary
Harry Valentín González
Subsecretary
Edna I. Berríos Vázquez, Ed. D.
Secretary of Auxiliary Academic Services
Beatriz Philpott Pérez
Director
English Program
Wanda Vázquez Garced
Office of Women Affairs
vii
English Program Committee
The English Program appreciates the valuable participation and commitment of all the
professors who took part in the process of designing these activities. Their effort and
mastery are a great contribution in creating, revising, and validating the document which
frames the integration of the curriculum of gender equity to the curriculum of the English
Program.
These lessons in teaching and learning are based on the curriculum of the program with
the sole purpose of promoting profound pondering on the social inequities among men
and women present in our society as a means to eradicate stereotypes, prejudice and
discrimination.
The integration and use of these lessons encourage equity between men and women
as the Universal Human Value to respect the dignity of all mankind in order to achieve
the gender equity the law establishes, but most important, required in our society.
Tanya Ayala
Facilitator
San Juan II School District
Marta J. Dávila
Facilitator
Gurabo School District
Daisy Hernández
Facilitator
Manatí School District
Jovita Flores
Facilitator
Vega Alta School District
Elizabeth López
Facilitator
Vega Alta School District
Angela Massi
Facilitator
Las Piedras School District
Nilsa Ortiz
Facilitator
Orocovis School District
Eneida Rivera
Facilitator
Barranquitas School District
Flor Pérez
Facilitator
San Sebastián School District
Tamara Acevedo
Teacher
José Julian Acosta School
Isabela School District
Ivonne Alvarado
Teacher
Inocencio Cintrón
Barranquitas School District
Norma Alvarado
Teacher
Sucesion Torres School
Barranquitas School District
Vilma Meléndez
Teacher
S. U. Antonio Vázquez
Barranquitas School District
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Damaris Rivera
Teacher
Patria La Torre School
San Sebastián School District
Suvani Rodríguez
Teacher
Sinforoso Aponte School
Barranquitas School District
Elizabeth Cruz
Teacher
Ramón M. Torres School
San Sebastian School District
Luz E. Feliciano
Teacher
English Program
Validation Committee
Damaris Torres
Office of Women Affairs
Prof. Antonio M. Aponte
Former Zone Supervisor
University of Turabo
Dra. Marta J. Dávila
University of Turabo
Amarilis Pagán Jiménez
Project Matria and CABE
América Facundo
UPR Medicine School
Richie Delgado Ortega
Department of Education
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Table of Contents
Message by the Secretary............................................................................................... v
Message from the Office of Women Affairs ....................................................................vi
Editors ............................................................................................................................ vii
English Program Committee ......................................................................................... viii
Definicion de Terminos.................................................................................................... 1
Introduction and Recommendations ................................................................................ 5
First Grade ...................................................................................................................... 7
Second Grade ............................................................................................................... 20
Third Grade ................................................................................................................... 32
Fourth Grade ................................................................................................................. 43
Fifth Grade .................................................................................................................... 57
Sixth Grade ................................................................................................................... 67
Seventh Grade .............................................................................................................. 76
Eighth Grade ................................................................................................................. 92
Ninth Grade ................................................................................................................. 108
Tenth Grade ................................................................................................................ 129
Eleventh Grade ........................................................................................................... 151
Twelfth Grade .............................................................................................................. 163
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Definition of Terms
The Department of Education recognizes the responsibility acquired by teachers
and professors on creating our society from the basic of sane coexistence among the
individuals of that society. Educating for equality of gender is fundamental to live in a
society which is enriched by the diversity present in its members to enhance effective
learning in our student body; in accordance to the educational practices and public
policy of the Department of Education.
It take a village to raise a child, an African proverb used and quoted widely for its
meaning and true essence of raising and educating a child. Whereas everyone in the
village has an important role in the education for each and every child in their
community. To educate requires encouraging the development of each individual in all
aspects, which make it necessary to create awareness among the students in order to
overcome the limitations of gender imposed on by society. The activities of all member
of the school community must promote social justice leading to reducing, if not the
elimination of prejudice undermining and underestimating any of its members.
To establish an appropriate and balanced dialogue, it is important that teachers and
professors become familiarized with the terms utilized in the analysis study of this guide
and its activities. The Department of Education of Puerto Rico defines these terms as
follows:
1. Self-esteem: extent to which one person likes and feels good about oneself
(Pruitt, Crumpler & Prothrow, 2000).
2. Civics: behavior of citizen and response to public rules (Real Academia
Española, 2012).
3. Culture: can now be considered as the set of distinctive spiritual and material,
intellectual and emotional features that characterize a society or a social group. It
includes, in addition to arts and culture, modes of life, the fundamental rights of
human beings, a system of values, traditions and beliefs that give people the
ability to reflect upon relevant issues (UNESCO, 2013).
4. Culture of peace: the set of values, attitudes, traditions, behaviors and lifestyles
that inspires and reflects upon: a) respect for life, human beings and all human
rights; (b) rejection of violence in all its forms and the commitment to prevent
violent conflict by attacking its causes to solve problems through dialogue and
negotiation; (c) the recognition of the equality of rights of every individual to
freedom of expression, opinion and information; (e) the adherence to the
principles of freedom, justice, democracy, tolerance, solidarity, cooperation,
pluralism, cultural diversity, dialogue and understanding among Nations,
including ethnic, religious, cultural groups, and people; (f) a sustained and longterm development action centered on the human being and based on mutual
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support; (g) the commitment to full participation in the process of satisfying the
needs of development and protection of the environment of the present
generation and future generations (UNESCO, 2013).
5. Human rights: essential rights that guarantee we can live as respected human
beings where we can grow or fully exercise our qualities, our intelligence, talent
and spirituality (UNESCO 2013).
6. Discrimination : to separate, exclude or segregate an individual from a group
because of physical features, ideas, religion, culture, by its sexual orientation,
economic position, or other apparent reasons by the depriving of opportunities.
7. Diversity: range of differences that encloses a variety of experiences, abilities,
talents, perspectives, and culture of every person respecting age, sex, gender,
sexual orientation, identity of gender, race, national origin, ethnicity, spirituality,
functional diversity, among others.
8. Stereotype: fixed idea on a given group of individuals that describes a group of
people in that group.
9. Gender equity: fair and just distribution of the benefits, power, resources and
responsibilities between women and men (Pan-American Organization of health,
2009).
10. Ethics: set of rules and customs that value and that guide human behavior.
11. Family: Group of people who are in various ways that take responsibility for the
physical, economic, spiritual, social, affective, and emotional needs of all its
members. They may or may not be linked by blood ties.
12. Gender: refers to the social concepts of functions, behaviors, activities, and
attributes that each society considers appropriate for men and women (World Health
Organization, 2013). Socially constructed characteristics that define and related
areas of the human being to work of feminine and the masculine.
13. Gender Identity: refers to the way in which the person is identified as recognized, in
terms of the gender which can corresponds or not to their biological sex at birth (law
22-2013).
14. Equality: principle that recognizes the ability of all people to exercise the same
rights. Equality is not the same as equity.
15. Male Chauvinism (Machismo): cultural attitudes or actions system that
promotes the idea of the superiority of men over women.
16. Abuse: mistreating a person through word or deed (Real Academia Española,
2012).
17. Sexual Orientation: Means the capacity of each person to feel an emotional,
affective or sexual attraction to people of a different gender, of the same gender,
or to both genders (Law 22-2013).
18. Patriarchate: Demonstration and institution of male dominance over women,
children in the family and of the extension of that domain of women in society in
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general (Gerda Lerner, 1986). The institutionalization of this domain is exercised
through the social structures, such as family, school, economy, army, religious
institutions, media, and government among others.
19. Peace: It is more than the absence of war and conflict; it is a dynamic concept that
should be considered in positive terms: the presence of social justice and harmony,
the possibility that human beings carry out fully its possibilities and enjoy the right to a
dignified and sustainable survival (UNESCO 1994).
20. Gender Perspective: a theoretical approach of analysis which facilitates to rethink
the social and cultural constructions of the distribution of power between women and
men and which directly affects, shapes and relates to people at all levels (InterAmerican Institute of human rights, 2008).
21. Prejudice: preconceived negative opinion towards something or someone.
22. Role by Gender: set of duties, prohibitions, and expectations about the
behaviors and activities considered socially appropriate for people who have a
particular sex (Murguialday, n.d.).
23. Sexism: conduct, use of language, politics or other actions of people that
express or sees a vision of superiority of one sex over another. Sexism
determines discrimination in all areas of life and acts as a limiting factor in the
educational, professional, and psychological development of people.
24. Sex: refers to the distinction between men and women based on their physical,
anatomical and physiological characteristics. Sex does not equal gender.
25. Socialization : process through which people acquires a sense of personal
identity, internalized behaviors, values and norms, that individuals consider
correct in time and particular culture.
26. Respect: value and practice that recognizes the dignity of human beings as
individuals. It is the fundamental basis for a just and peaceful coexistence of the
people that forms a society. This value extends to institutions, nature, animals,
among others.
27. Violence: intentional use of force or physical power, fact or threat to self,
another person or a group, community or animals, that causes, or is likely to
result in injury, death, psychological harm, developmental disorders or
deprivation (OMS, 2003).
28. Gender-Based Violence: any act of violence towards any gender that may
cause physical, sexual or psychological sufferings. All threats to such acts,
coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether it occurs in public or private
life (OMS, 2007). It includes and goes beyond the relationship between couples.
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English
Program
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Introduction and Recommendations
The first step to promote gender equality and develop gender-responsive attitudes is to
be aware of gender issues, what it means, what needs to be done and how to
accomplish it. This is why teachers play such a crucial role in every classroom. They are
the actors / actresses who shape the success or failure of their students. They can detect
and analyze the gender responsiveness of all students.
Understanding that teaching/learning materials are frequently gender-biased is key to
help guide the students in identifying when women/girls are less frequently mentioned
than men and boys, or whenever they are mentioned, girls and women are being
projected as passive, shy, weak, while boys and men are adventurous, inquisitive,
courageous, heroic and clever. Women’s potential for excelling in non-traditional tasks
may not be often mentioned, and women may be rarely referred to as managers, pilots,
lawyers, scientists, doctors or heads of state. These stereotypes often found in textbooks
may determine how girls and boys choose their subjects and ultimately, their careers.
Still, the teacher needs to go further than the textbooks, a gender sensitive teacher
should keep in mind to give female and male students equal opportunity to write on the
board, to answer, to present their work, to give similar classroom duties (cleaning, moving
desks, etc.), and to encourage each one to be leaders or co-leaders.
The activities in this curriculum are not enough to address the gender perspective,
especially when it is for the whole school experience. The teacher should examine each
text, picture or material they are to give each day before introducing it to the students.
Aside from the understanding of the material, the teacher should be keen to identify if it
promotes gender equality or if, on the contrary, it perpetuates gender bias and
stereotypes. Also if the material portrays or mentions men and women on the same
degree, how often they appear, what kind of activity they are doing, what roles they play,
and so on.
The curriculum presents sintax issues, making them confusing or irrelevant to gender
perspective. Confusing the terms “gender” and “sex” as a same concept. Other activities
were basically the same, repeated, even within the same grade. It also presents some
activities that were well thought of with enough discussion and depth for the students to
grasp the concept of gender and equity. Perhaps those could be acclimated for lower
grades.
It is a concern that there are no novels included in the reading material, even for high
school students. The English language has a great variety of women and men writers
that should be introduced at this age group / grade.
Throughout this English Module, we have the opportunity to distribute the learning
experience in phases from raising awareness in lower grades to discussing in depth the
realities and consequences of gender bias and stereotyping. Yet, the module falls short
on this opportunity, because the activities seem to be at random, without direction or an
overall plan.
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It is highly recommended to plan beforehand stages/phases throughout the grades and
develop the activities according to that plan, so that when the student arrives to high
school, they should have a solid concept of gender equity and can progress into changing
our current paradigm.
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class: English
First Grade:
Unit: 1.2 Our Diverse Community
Standard and Expectation:
1. S.5 Describe the personal experiences regarding human diversity, using new vocabulary
and details about familiar topics, appropriate to situation.
Topic of the activity: Identifying and analyzing traditional gender roles in our diverse
community.
Duration: 40 minutes
Description: Students will have the opportunity to identify jobs/occupations within the school
setting and their community.
Purpose: The student will describe ways to help our community
jobs/occupations can be performed by all human beings.
comprehend
Objective: After identifying and analyzing traditional gender roles in our community, students
will explore different types of jobs/occupations within the school and focus on how school
workers meet community needs. (Such as teachers, counselors, social workers, janitors and
others)
Activities:
Initial:
Ask students to brainstorm the different types of jobs in their school and
community.
Developing:
List the responses on the board. Emphasize on the fact that any gender can/could do
any of the occupations listed.
Ask students to give examples of skills that the jobs may require. Interact with the
students when skills mentioned are gender related to break any stereotypes that may
arise.
Ask students to role-play one of their favorite occupations.
Students may want to “dress the part” for the role-play activity.
Closing:
Have guest’s representative of the occupations to speak to the students, challenging
stereotypes: A police woman, a female firefighter, female physician, male nurse.
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Students can participate in field trips to local community sites such as the firehouse,
post office, dentist, etc…
Materials:
Hand-outs
First Grade Worksheet 1
Bulletin Board
Colored Paper
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First- Worksheet 1
Unit 1.2
Our Diverse Community
My Name: _______________________________________________________
Have students draw a picture of their local community and the people who hold related jobs.
This is My Community:
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First- Worksheet 2
Unit 1.2
Our Diverse Community
Name: ______________________________________________________________
Date: _______________________________________________________________
Have students find pictures of people that represent the occupations discussed by the guest
speakers and other occupations of personal interest. Have students cut and paste the
magazine pictures to make a collage of the occupations discussed. Have students explain
their collage to a partner. Display the collages on the bulletin board.
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class: English
Grade: First
Unit: 1.4 How can I help?
Standard and Expectation: 1.S.3
Topic of the activity: Oral Presentation Gender Equity and Community Role Models
Duration: 45 minutes
Description: People who work within the community will be invited to share occupational
information with students.
Each occupation should have a male and female role model to deliver the presentation.
Purpose: The students will discover equity among genders and distinguish the diversity of
jobs within the community.
Objectives: The student will differentiate among various jobs in the community and discover
that law requires jobs/occupations provide equal employment opportunities for genders
(with the teachers help).
Activities:
Initial:
People who work within the community will be invited to share occupational information
with students. Each occupation should have a male and female role model to deliver the
presentation.
Developing:
Tell students that people who work in the community will be invited to the classroom to talk
about their jobs. (Parents, post officers, police, school personnel, etc.) Contact and
schedule the above mentioned individuals.
Closing:
Ask the speakers to emphasize the type of education and training required for them
successfully perform their jobs.
Support the students in drawing the conclusion that men and women have to complete the
same type of education and training process to acquire jobs.
Ask students to write a story about the occupation that interested them the most.
Students will work in small groups and role-play their favorite occupation.
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Materials:
First Worksheet 1
Guest Speakers
Board
Magazines
Scissors
Glue
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Name: _______________________________________ First Grade - Worksheet 1
Date: ____________________________________________
Gender Equity and Community Role Models
Have students find pictures of diverse people that represent the occupations discussed by
the guest speakers and other occupations of personal interest. Have students cut and paste
the magazine pictures to make a collage of the occupations. Have students explain their
collage to a partner. Display the collages in the classroom.
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class: English
Grade: First
Unit: 1.5 Let’s Celebrate
Standard and Expectation: 1.R.7
Topic of the activity: Celebrating Diversity with Elmer
Duration: 60 minutes
Description: This lesson is used to promote respect of differences in the classroom and
school.
Purpose: The lesson looks at what Elmer did and mentions reasons why people might hide
who they really are to ‘fit in’.
Objectives:
After the teacher reads the story Elmer, the students will discuss Elmer’s similarities and
differences when compared with all of the other elephants. Students will discuss their own
similarities and differences and will learn how to respect those differences together.
Activities:
Initial:
1. Read Elmer to the class.
2. Guide students in completing the Celebrating Differences with Elmer
Developing:
1. Discuss Elmer’s similarities and differences to the other elephants, then students’ discuss
their own similarities and differences among one another.
2. Talk to students about celebrating our differences and why we are special.
Closing:
1. Students draw and decorate their own elephant, then should write about why their
elephant is special.
2. Students’ elephants can be displayed with the “Our Elephants” poster.
Materials:
Elmer by David McKee (HarperCollins, 1989)
Blank Paper
Lined Paper
Pencils
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(Attachment # 1)
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class: English
Grade: First
Unit: 1.8 How We Change
Standard and Expectation:
1. S. 1: Participate in class, group and partner discussion by listening attentively, following
turn- taking rules, and asking and answering questions about personal experience and
stories with more elaborated responses, transitioning from one-or two responses and simple
sentences.
Topic of the activity: The Real Me
Duration: 40 minutes
Description: Students will begin to explore the qualities that make them special in their own
way. It is important for them to know and understand what makes them unique.
Purpose: After identifying and analyzing traditional gender roles in our community they will
explore different types of jobs/occupations in the school community and focus on how
community workers meet community needs with different genders.
Objectives: After identifying the gender roles in our community the students will explore the
qualities that make them special in their own way and how important it is for them to know
and understand what makes them unique correctly.
Activities:
Initial: Discuss the fact that we are all unique and special in different ways, and that it is
important to share those unique qualities with others. Have students meet into small groups
and share their “special” qualities.
Developing: After identifying their special qualities, students pair their unique qualities with
roles they can have in their communities, comprehending that gender is not a limitation to
what they can achieve.
Students should draw pictures of themselves and post their Worksheets on the bulletin
board.
Closing:
Students identify their own special interests and possible community roles. They will draw
pictures to illustrate them.
Ask students what they would wish for if they had the chance to make three wishes come
true.
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Materials:
First Worksheet 1
Bulletin Board
Colored Paper
Crayons
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Name: ______________________________________________________________
Date: _______________________________________________________________
Check the best answer
I am
I am
____ slow as a turtle
____ ticklish
____ fast as a rabbit
____ not ticklish
I am
I am
____ neat and clean
____ an indoor person
____ kind of messy
____ an outdoor person
I am more
The time I like best is
____ jokeful
____ morning
____ serious
____ night
I am
____ right-handed
My hair is
____ left-handed
____ long
My face has
____ medium
____ no freckles
____ short
____ a few freckles
____ curly
____ lots of freckles
____ straight
I eat like a
____I do not have hair.
____ bird
____ horse
I am
I usually
____ noisy as a firecracker
____ wear glasses
____ quiet as a mouse
____ do not wear glasses
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Name: ________________________________________________________________
Date: _________________________________________________________________
Finish each sentence
1) I love to _______________________________________
2) I used to ______________________________________
3. I do not like to __________________________________
4. I want to_______________________________________
5. I have never____________________________________
6. I wonder_______________________________________
7. I worry________________________________________
8. I get into trouble when I___________________________
9. The best thing about being me_____________________
10. I like to dream about____________________________
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Guide for Activities
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Second Grade
Unit: 2.1 Bilingual and Proud
PRCS: 2.L.1a, 2.S.1, 2.S.3, 2.S.5, 2.S.5, 2.W.3
Activity Theme: When I grow up I want to be a…
Duration: 30 minutes
Description: This lesson helps young students explore the gender stereotypical beliefs that
limits the types of activities and interests they pursue. Through a game about gender roles
and musical instruments, small and large groups brainstorm and discuss children’s literature
that transcends gender barriers. Students increase their awareness of gender stereotypes
and learn about ways to overcome them.
Purpose: The Purpose of teaching students about gender stereotypes is not to pressure
them to pursue activities simply because they are gender non-conforming, but rather to
broaden students’ notions about the choices open to them.
Objectives: After having a conversation about musical instruments the student will engage in
a learning game that challenges gender role stereotypes adequately.
After asking questions about gender roles the student will name activities regarded as only
for boys or girls adequately.
Initial Activities:
Tell the students that they will participate in a brief matching game called Making Music.
Divide the class into small groups of 3 – 5 students and provide each group with a Making
Music handout and a set of Making Music (Student Photos). Have groups lay out the photos
on a table and tell them that each of these children has signed up to learn a new musical
instrument.
Development Activities:
Instruct groups to do the following:
Discuss which person they think should learn each instrument, and glue or tape the photos
accordingly in the first column when the group has come to an agreement. (Tell students that
they can only assign one person to each instrument.) Discuss about the musicians they like.
Which instruments they play? Teacher must list them on the board.
Discuss which of the six instruments they would choose if they could learn a new instrument,
and write their names accordingly in the second column. (Tell students that more than one
person can choose the same instrument.)
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Closing:
Reconvene the class and invite a representative from each group, one at a time, to share the
groups’ decisions. Post the completed handouts where everyone can see them and engage
the class in a discussion using
Materials:
Making music Handout (One copy per small group)
Making music (Student Photos) (One copy per small group)
All Children Making Music (One copy)
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Second Grade
Unit: 2.3 Myths and Creation Stories
Standards and Expectations: 2.L.1, 2.S.1, 2.S.2b,
Theme: Everyone is Unique: A Lesson in Respect to Others
Duration: 90 minutes
Description: In this lesson, students search for the most positive aspects of some very
unusual "people." The activity reinforces the idea that one can't always judge the quality of a
person by their appearance; people should be appreciated for their differences.
Purpose: Teach students about respect for others' and their unique qualities combining art
and language arts.
Objectives: After having a conversation about the word unique the student will demonstrate
that they can:
 Define the word unique in their own words correctly.
 Create a unique person by following instructions.
 Mention the positive qualities of this person using respectful words.
Procedure:
Initial Activities: To begin the lesson, write the word unique on the chalkboard or on a
chart. Younger students, especially, will be intrigued by this "unique" word! Ask students
what the word means to them. Ask: What is it that makes you unique among your
classmates? Next, draw a simple outline of a person on the board or chart. Draw two
horizontal lines across the person's body. One line should divide the person's head
(including the neck) and torso (shoulders to waist); the other should divide the torso and
leg area (from the waist-down). Talk about one section of the body at a time. Discuss
some of the features that might make up a person's head/neck. Lead students to
understand that people can have blue eyes or brown eyes, small ears or big ears, curly
hair or straight hair, dark skin, light skin, or a shade in between, freckles, glasses, or a hat,
and so on. Write students ideas about a person's head on the board or chart next to the
head area of the person you drew.
Discuss some of the ways in which people's bodies might be different. Lead students to
understand that people can be skinny or heavy, muscular or frail, square- or roundshouldered, and so on. Talk about the kinds of clothing people might wear -- a T-shirt, a
sweater, a scarf. Teachers write on the board the kinds of clothing student’s mention.
Write down some of the possibilities for students’ name.
Finally, focus on the lower body (from the waist down). Point out that people can have
skinny or stubby legs and their feet point in, out, or straight ahead. People wear pants,
dresses, high-top sneakers, high-heeled shoes, construction boots, ballerina slippers, and
so on. Write down students' ideas.
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Development Activities:
Provide each student with a piece of white drawing paper measuring 2 square inches. Have
students write their names on one side of the paper and draw on the other side of the paper
the head of a person. Tell students that this should not be somebody they know; this unique
person should come from their imaginations. Remind them to think first about the features
the persons head will have; they can refer to the list they and their classmates created in the
first part of the lesson. They should include as much detail as possible in their drawings.
It is very important that students fill up the entire square with the image of the person's head.
Also, remind them their head could use a neck to sit on!
When students finish drawing a unique head, provide them with a sheet of paper that
measures 4 square inches. After students write their names on one side of the paper, they
should turn the paper over and draw the torso (shoulders to waist) of the person. Before they
draw, remind students to imagine the features of the person’s torso. How is the body
shaped? What clothing is the person wearing? Once again, students should fill the entire
space and draw as much detail as possible. Think unique!
When students finish drawing a torso, hand them a third sheet of paper; this time a 3- square
inch. Have students write their names on one side of the paper, and draw the bottom part of
their person (waist down to the feet). Remind students to fill up the space and include as
much detail as possible. Once again, tell them to think unique!
As students finish their final square, have them check to be sure their names are on all three
parts; then collect them. You might have students put the heads in one box or folder, the
torsos in another, and the legs in a third.
Closing Activities: This part of the lesson might be done the same day or the next day.
Distribute to each student a head, a torso, and a set of legs. Students should not get a body
part that they drew. Have students tape together the three body parts to create a totally
unique "friend." The new friends will be pretty unusual-looking people, to say the least! But...
Everybody is different, or unique. What a person looks like on the outside has nothing to do
with what is inside! Every person has special talents, special qualities...
After students have had a good laugh about how the three body parts came together to
create an unusual-looking person, ask each student to think up a name for his or her new
"friend" and to give some thought to some of the characteristics the new friend might have.
Ask: What special qualities does this unique person have? What special talents does the
person possess? What do you have in common with your new friend? How are you different?
Students can add strips of paper with human qualities and abilities. They can also dress up
their new friend.
Materials:
23

2- square inch of white drawing paper, one sheet per student

3- square inch of white drawing paper, one sheet per student

4- square inch of white drawing paper, one sheet per student

art supplies (might include crayons, markers, or paints)
It is important to point out that regardless of the differences, each person has the same
value. We might be different in some ways, but similar in so many others.
24
Activity Guide
Equity Gender Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Second Grade
Unit: 2.5 Heroes
Standards and Expectations:
2. L.1a 2.L.1g 2.R.1 2.S.1 2.W.1
Theme: “Bursting Stereotypes”
Description: Balloons serve as a conduit in this lesson in which students "burst" stereotypes
that unfairly label individuals or groups.
Purpose: Students will learn that stereotypes make us judge people unfairly.
Objectives:
After the teacher explains and presents examples of stereotypes, the student will:
 Define the word stereotype.
 Classify statements in fair or unfair.
 Explain what a stereotype is and what they learned from the activity in their own
words.
Procedure:
Initial Activities:
To begin the lesson, write the words man and woman side-by-side at the top of the
chalkboard or on a piece of chart paper. Draw a vertical line between the two words to
create a two-column chart. Have students set up a piece of writing paper in the same way.
Then ask students to write words or phrases that describe the qualities or characteristics
of a man under the word man and words or phrases that describe a woman under the
word woman. To get the ball rolling, you might ask students to share a few ideas with their
classmates. Following are some stereotypical students’ responses:
Man -- active, sports-lover, short hair, hardworking, truck driver, breadwinner, strong
Woman -- loving, nurse, shop, likes flowers, cries easily, long hair
Give students a few minutes to compile their lists.
Arrange students into small groups and ask them to share their lists with group members.
Then give each group two minutes to brainstorm additional words or phrases describing a
man, and two minutes to brainstorm additional words or phrases describing a woman.
Bring the groups together to create a class list of words and phrases about men and
women. Write them on the chalkboard as students share them. Then ask some of the
following questions:

Are you happy with the lists you have created? Do you see any changes you would
like to make to them?
25

Are there terms that do not belong under the heading they're under? Are there terms
that might fit under both headings?

Is it fair to say that all men _________ or that all women ________?
Development Activities:
Write the word stereotype on the chalkboard or chart. Ask students if they know what the
word means. Write down the dictionary definition of the word. For example, Scholastic
Children’s Dictionary defines the term this way:
An overly simple picture or opinion of a person, group, or thing. It is a stereotype to say all
old people are forgetful. Write on the chalkboard or chart the following phrases:
All old people are forgetful. Men are better at math than women are. African-American men
are the best basketball players.
Give students a few moments to consider those phrases. Then ask them to share their
reactions. Lead students to the conclusion that the statements are too general to be true;
encourage them to recognize that it is unfair to make such sweeping statements. Help
students make the connection between the phrases and the term stereotype.
Closing Activities: The teacher will present different examples of stereotypes like:

Kids who are into computers are geeky.

Young kids are noisy.

People who wear glasses are smart.

Poor people are lazy.

All Puerto Ricans dance salsa.

Women are better cooks than men.

Girls are not as athletic as boys.

All politicians are crooks.

Everyone believes in God.

Native Americans live on reservations.

All physicians are rich.

All U.S. people like to watch baseball.

All tall people are good basketball players.

Boys don’t cry

Boys don’t play with dolls

That is not girly
26

Girls are neat boys are messy

And others
Now it’s time to grab from the closet the bag of inflated balloons or to stand near the bulletin
board you have prepared.

If you have created a bulletin board for this activity, ask students to read each
sentence strip aloud and staple it next to a balloon on the bulletin board. When all
sentence strips are stapled to the board, lead a class discussion about each
stereotype. [Have a common pin concealed in your hand for the next part of the
activity.] Ask students if the stereotype statements are fair statements. When you are
satisfied that students have refuted the stereotype, swipe the balloon with the common
pin. Pop! -- that stereotype has been burst.

If you choose not to create the bulletin board, call students holding sentence strips to
come one at a time to the front of the classroom. Have each student read aloud the
statement on his or her strip and hold the strip up for classmates to see. Hold up a
balloon as the strip holder calls on classmates to refute the stereotype on the strip.
Once satisfied that the stereotype has been blasted, pop the balloon.
Ask students to share how they felt about the lesson. What did they learn? Were there times
during the lesson when they felt angry or sad?
Materials:
2-dozen multi-colored balloons, inflated
2-dozen paper or tag board sentence strips, 2-inches wide by 12-inches long
Thumbtacks (optional)
Crayons or markers
Common pin
27
Activity Guide
Equity Gender Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Second Grade
Unit: 2.5 Heroes
PRCS: 2.L.1, 2.L.1.a, 2.L.1.g, 2.S., 2.S.2
Theme: Don’t Laugh at Me
Duration: 30 – 45 minutes
Description: In this lesson, students will learn about caring, empathy and respect.
Purpose: Teach about empathy and respect.
Objectives:
After the teacher reads the storybook, “Don’t Laugh at Me” the student will:
 Answer questions correctly.
 Relate the story to real life situations adequately.
Class Activities:
Initial Activities:
Torn heart. Pass a large paper heart around the class and have each student tear off a small
piece. When what is left comes back to you, explain that this is what it feels like to a person
who is teased and bullied and made fun off on a regular basis. Hard to put this heart back
together!
Discussion questions:





What is bullying?
What is teasing?
Have you ever seen anyone teased in a mean way? (no names please)
Has it ever happened to you?
What are the effects of cruel teasing and bullying?
Development Activities:
Read the storybook to the group
 Discuss the illustrations and relate to real life situations. Ask students about the
characters in the book and if they think their hearts are being torn.
 Allow students to comment on the illustrations, remembering not to mention anyone by
name, unless it is a positive example.
28
Closing Activities:
Follow up discussion questions.
 What are your reactions to the storybook?
 Why do you think kids bully and tease? (Some reasons to point out: to get attention,
imitation, feelings of superiority, peer acceptance, misunderstanding differences,
media influences, among others)
 What are some things we can all agree to do to stop bullying and teasing?
 Survey: Who in this class will raise your hand and show you have the courage to do
these things?

Materials:
Storybook - Don’t Laugh at Me
Large paper heart to be torn
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJzaKQFBc4o (story)
This is a great activity to talk about empathy and respect. But in order to include gender in
the mix, it should include examples of gender-based bullying. For example:
•
You run like a girl.
•
You hit like a girl.
The activity could be developed for higher grades and use stronger words;
•
You ‘fag’, “faggot”, “lesbo”, “freak”
•
“Tomboy”, “loser”, “fatso”
29
Activity Guide
Equity Gender Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Second Grade
Unit: 2.6 Art and Author Study
Standards and Expectations: 2.L. 1c, 2.R.2.L
Theme: Boys and girls should be themselves.
Duration: 60 minutes
Description: In this lesson, students will develop awareness of being an individual,
acceptance of others who like different things and to express oneself and think about others
feelings.
Purpose: Teach about respect for others' unique qualities in this lesson that combines art
and language arts.
Objectives:
After the teacher explains the concept of individuality and provide examples the students will
demonstrate that they can:
 Explain what it means to be an individual in their own words.
 Identify problems with not treating people equally.
 Model how to treat people with respect acting out a script.
Procedure:
Initial Activities:
Do a KWL with the students, seeing what they know about the word individuality and what
they want to know about it. Direct when necessary, having them think about what being an
individual means. Take this into a discussion where kids share questions and experiences
and get them focused on the lesson to be learned. For ESL children, show the class a
poster with the word "individual" labeled and pictures (Ensure that the pictures presented
have gender perspective. For instance;
-
A boy playing with dolls, in a kitchen washing dishes or cleaning and sweeping.
- A girl playing with a basketball, cars or construction) for all kids to see what types of
things all children can play with or like, such as dolls, blocks, cars, stuffed animals, etc.
Talk through the poster with the kids and emphasize that all children are having fun and
doing things that they like adequately.
Development Activities:
Read the story, William’s Doll by C. Zolotow. Ask students to predict what
they think the book will be about by reading the title and looking at the cover
picture. Stop and discuss certain events and behaviors from the characters
in the story after every few pages. For instance, how the father negatively
30
reacts to the boy’s liking dolls, how the mother supports her son, and how
the grandmother also supports him and buys him a doll in the end.
Closing Activities: After reading, talk with the students about if it was acceptable for William
to like playing with dolls. Lead the students into discussing if it is ok to play with any toy and
why. Talk about how William liking his doll makes him an individual; he does not care what
others think of him. Invite all children to share whether they liked the story and why. Ask why
it is important to be an individual and what would happen if everyone was too concerned
about what others think.
Add the word individual to the Word Wall and ask someone to explain again what it means.
Complete the KWL by having kids tell what they learned from the lesson. Have a group of
kids come to the front of the classroom and have a script for how they will react next time
they encounter someone who is different than them or someone who likes something they do
not. At the end, have students explain why it is important to respect individuals and how it
makes you feel when people are understanding and respectful.
Materials:


Chart paper
William’s Doll by C. Zolotow

Paper

Crayons

Poster with pictures of individuals playing with different things

Script for students to act out how to behave when they encounter someone who is
different from them.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Vhcqo3oZaA
31
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Third Grade
Unit: 3.2 Immigration
Standards and Expectations: 3.L.1a, 3.L.1e, 3.S.1, 3.S.4, 3.R.1, 3.W.1
Theme: Cultural Diversity
Duration: 60 minutes – 90 minutes
Description: To make children aware of the many cultures that have richly contributed to the
development of Puerto Rico and to teach them the importance of cultural diversity within and
across groups.
Purpose: To help children compare and contrast accounts of immigrants who came to
Puerto Rico. There are many influences that the children could relate in Puerto Rico such as:
-
Dominicans
Cubans
Venezuelans, Columbians, Peruvians, etc.
Objectives:
After having a conversation about the word unique the student will demonstrate that they
can:
 define the word unique in their own words correctly.
 create a unique person by following instructions.
 mention the positive qualities of this person using respectful words with appropriately.
Procedures:
Initial Activities:
Give students a brief background of the content information about “Immigrants” to America.
Show photographs from immigrants to illustrate key points. Explain to students that most of
us descend from people who came to America from another place, and that it is this diversity
which makes our country so wonderful.
Development Activities:
Prepare students to hear the story Stone Soup.
1. Before reading, ask, “See if you can figure out how this hungry boy solves his problem.”
2. Read Stone Soup to the class.
3. Discuss story. “Was the stone magic? What made the soup better? Would it have worked
with just a few of the vegetables in it? Yes, but it is better with a variety of vegetables in it.
32
4. Put up poster a depicting our rich, diverse cultures.
5. “How is this soup like people? Remember, it was better and better as more items were
added. How is that like our town, or like America?
6. “What wonderful things has your own family brought to our world? Share some special
traditions your family has.” (Teacher shares her family traditions to give them ideas such as;
special Jewish meal for Easter, codfish gravy for Christmas morning, birthday parties for
even birthdays, family parties for odd birthdays, green milk and eggs or French toast for St.
Patrick’s Day, etc.)
7. “Are we all the same then? Is it good to have diversity in our culture?”
8. In a Venn diagram compare and contrast the different immigrants that came to America
(USA) to those that came to Puerto Rico. Discuss in class.
Closing Activities:
1. let’s make Stone Soup for ourselves.
* Have students help measure, pour milk, and serve crackers.
*Serve in plastic bowls with a plastic spoon and a napkin.
2. Review by saying, “We read Stone Soup and discussed how each different vegetable
made the soup so much better. We decided that people are like this soup. Diversity of people
make this world a much better place to live.
Assessment
Discuss which immigrant men and women have made an impact in our Puerto Rican society.
Using 6 frames, students will create a comic strip, depicting the knowledge they have gained
about the immigrants’ arrival in America (USA).
Materials:
Content information about “Immigrants”
Display photographs
Poster depicting our rich, diverse cultures
Stew Pot
Vegetables and hamburger (suggest frozen vegetables to avoid peeling and have
Hamburger pre-cooked)
Measuring cups and spoons
Full milk carton (gallon)
Paper towels
Crackers
Hot Pads
Scoop for dipping soup
Plastic bowls, spoons, napkins, cups
Story https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_TXIoiuBd4
33
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Third Grade
Unit: 3.2 Immigration
PRCS: 3.L.1a, 3.L.1e, 3.S.1, 3.S.1, 3.S.4,
Theme: What’s righteous?
Duration: 60 minutes
Description: In this lesson, the students will recognize situations that are fair and unfair for
humans.
Purpose: Teach about fairness and ways that students can show fairness to others.
Objectives:
After presenting situations about fairness and unfairness the student will be able to
 name situations related to fairness adequately.
 identify fair and unfair situations correctly.
 brainstorm ways that they can show fairness toward others appropriately.
Initial Activities:
1. Before students enter the room, divide the class into two groups by the month they
were born (e.g., Jan.-June and July-Dec.). Then do the following:

Divide students into two groups without telling them why they are being separated.
Direct the students in each group to sit in different areas of the room.

Choose one of the groups to favor. Without explaining why, give everyone in your
favored group a few pieces of candy (or new pencils). Explain to the class that only
one group will get the candy. That same group will be the only ones to get other
special privileges (such as extra recess Duration, no homework, being first in line,
etc.) Students in the other group likely will protest.
After a few minutes (or until someone in the other group says, “that’s not fair!”), stop
the exercise.


Ask students if they know what determined whether they were in the favored group
or the non-favored group. Encourage all guesses and share the answer.
2. How did you feel during the exercise? Do you think you would have felt differently if
you had been the one getting the candy and special treats than if you had been the
one not getting the candy and special treats?
Development Activities:
1. (Note: Write the word, “fair” on the board.) Think about the following question: What
does the word, “fair” mean to you? Pair up with another student and share your ideas
34
about the definition of fair. Try to come up with answers you both like and share them
with the rest of the class.
2. Do you think that it was “fair” or “unfair” that some kids got candy and other special
privileges? Why or why not? If not fair, what would have made it fair? Would it be fair
to give the candy to students who earned it? Would it be fair if all students got the
candy? Would it be fair if you picked 10 students names out of a hat to get the candy?
3. Do you think it is fair not to allow someone to do something because they are a female
or male? (“Think about domestic chores in your home and how boys or girls are
favored”.)
4. Take two craft sticks, two small circles, a crayon and a glue stick. Draw a happy face
on one circle and a sad face on the other. Glue a “face” at the top of each stick. (Note:
distribute cards with situations written on them.) Read the card. If you think the
situation is “fair,” hold up your happy face. If you think the situation is “unfair,” hold up
your sad face (Note: An alternative is to have students do thumbs up or down).
5. Hold up the cards with the situations that are “unfair.” Why are they unfair? Which do
you think is the most unfair? Why?
6. Choose one of the unfair situations and talk with your classmates about how you could
turn it into a fair situation? Share answers with the class.
7. Discuss the following: Do you think the rules in your classroom are usually fair? Share
examples.

Why do you think it is important that the rules in the classroom are fair?

How would you feel if only certain kids got candy or special privileges based on
what they looked like or whether they were a boy or girl?

What does treating people fairly mean?

Have you ever seen anyone being treated unfairly or treating someone unfairly
yourself? What can you do if you think someone is being treated unfairly?
Closing Activities:
Get out a piece of paper and art materials. Divide the paper in half by drawing a line down
the middle. On the left side of the paper, draw a picture of something you think would be
unfair. It can be something that is unfair in class, in your family, on a team or in your
community. Then on the right side of the paper, draw a picture of how that same situation
could change to become fair. Write a sentence under each picture that describes what is
“unfair” and what is “fair.”
35
Materials:
Bag of candy (or new pencils)
Craft sticks (two for each student)
Paper cut into small circles (two for each student)
Art materials (paper, crayons, glue sticks)
Handout: Fair or Unfair (PDF) (reproduce and cut out cards)
36
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class: English
Grade: Third
Unit: 3.4 News / 3.7 Outer Space
Standard and Expectation: 3.L.1a, 3.L.1e, 3.S.1, 3.W.6, 3.W.FS.9,
Topic of the activity: Let’s Create an Ad
Duration: 90 minutes
Description:
Students explore resources on how to become an astronaut, write job descriptions for three
categories of astronauts, and compose ads for astronaut positions about their space travel
event to be held at their school.
Purpose: To learn about occupational planning using gender equity, students explore the
education, background, and personality traits required of astronauts.
Objective: After studying different famous astronauts and discussing why there are not as
many women as men astronauts, the students will demonstrate the ability to write a
newspaper ad about themselves as an astronaut with the teachers help.
Activities:
Initial:
1. Read and discuss the story I Want to Be an Astronaut by Byron Barton
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zan4Zq73iRU
Developing:
1. Provide students with examples of job ads and job descriptions.
2. Discuss the information provided in each kind of document and help students notice the
differences between them.
3. Organize students into three groups and assign a position -- either a pilot, mission
specialist, or payload specialist -- to each group. Be careful while distributing or assigning
positions. Avoid giving boys traditional positions such as pilot, etc.
37
Closing:
1. Pretend you are a famous astronaut coming to your school to talk about space travel
and answer student questions about being an astronaut.
2. Have each group write a job description and job ad for each assigned position.
Teachers must focus why it does not matter if you are a female or male.
3. Create an ad with its title announcing your visit. (Example See Attachment # 1)
a. Use your name in the title.
b. Insert one or more clipart graphics about astronauts and / or space.
c. Write your event’s admission times and ticket prices.
d. Write the details of what, when, and where using lively words.
e. Add your own creative and exciting information.
f. Add a fun border to your ad.
Materials:
Paper
Pen/pencil
Pictures
Crayons
(Example Attachment # 1)
38
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class: English
Grade: Third
Unit: 3.5 Democracy & Citizenship
Standard and Expectation: 3.L.1b, 3.S.2, 3.S.4
Topic of the activity: Gender Shouldn't Limit You!
Duration: 50 minutes
Description:
In the following unit Democracy & Citizenship the students will learn about the political
gender biases. The teacher will discuss list of characteristics that a president of a country
should possess. The students will select a class president.
Purpose: Learning about sexism will influence the students' ability to recognize and combat
gender discrimination.
Objectives:
After the student brainstorm about the characteristics of a president, the students will choose
a class president with teacher’s guidance.
Activities:
Initial:
1. Explain to students that today they are going to vote for a class president.
2. Begin by discussing with students the various duties of a class president -- for
example, making choices about class parties, leading students out during an
earthquake drill, or assigning students to care for class pets.
Developing:
1. Have students brainstorm a list of characteristics that a president should have -- for
example, leadership, ability to make decisions, intelligent, etc. (Attachment 1).
2. Tell the students that they are going to vote on who should be class president. Ask
students not to let their neighbors see their vote.
3. Give each student a slip of paper and a pen or pencil. Have them write for whom
they will be voting for. Have them place their paper ballot in a ballot box.
Closing:
1. Take the slips out and tally the votes.
2. Announce the vote, and debrief with the class:

Which gender got the most votes? How many more votes?
39

Who was chosen for the class president?

Why do you think they made that choice?

Even though some other countries have had female, or girl leaders, United States
of America has never had a woman president. How many governors in PR have
been women? Why? Is the fact that she is a woman ever used to criticize her job
or to agree with her job? Do you think that is right or fair? Why?

In the next presidential election, do you hope a woman runs for president? Why?

Pretend that you are going to vote for the governor of our Puerto Rico. A woman
and a man have equal skills. Would you vote for the man or woman? Why?
Materials:
Slip of paper
Pen/pencil
Attachment # 1
(Attachment # 1)
40
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Third Grade
Unit: 3.5 Citizen and Democracy
PRCS: 3.L.1, 3.L.1b, 3.W.1, 3.W.4
Theme: Who Matters?
Duration: 120 minutes
Description: To understand the concept that the Human Rights of all people are important
no matter how small or big or how young or old they are.
Purpose: Teach about the importance of human rights.
Objectives:
After the students listen to the story Horton’s Hears a “Who”, the students will:
 answer questions through class discussion adequately.
 explain the importance of human rights and responsibilities for everyone with the
teacher’s guidance.
Activities:
Initial Activities:
Read Aloud. Have students gather on the rug to listen to Horton Hears a Who by Dr.
Seuss. Teachers can prompt the students to participate in the reading by having them
complete each line with the correct rhyming word.
Development Activities:
Discuss. After the story is read, lead the students in a discussion on the lesson of the story:
“a person’s a person no matter how small.” As a class, discuss the following questions:
• What did Horton do that was so important?
• What would have happened to the Who’s if Horton didn’t protect them?
• What was the lesson of this story? What does, “a person’s a person no matter how small”
mean?
• Are you given the care and respect you deserve? Is everyone? Should emphasize …
Regardless of their color?
Their origin?
Their language?
41
Their religion?
Their sex?
Their sexual orientation?
Their politics views?
• Have you ever met a person like Horton?
• Why was it so hard for Horton to convince others that the Who’s existed and needed to be
saved?
• How can we be friends to others even if we can’t see them?
Closing Activities:
Reflect and Create. After the discussion, ask students to think about what they say to
Horton would if they were a Who and have them write it down on the speech bubble in the
handout. Ask students to make Horton the elephant using glue and the construction pieces in
the handout. Finally, ask students to add the flower and their words to Horton.
Connect. Explain to your students that not only does everyone matter, but that everyone
also has human rights, including children, which helps ensure that we are all cared for and
respected. There is even a special document created just for them called the Convention on
the Rights of the Child (CRC). Share a child-friendly version of this document with students.
Read several of the rights out loud to the class.
Draw. Have students draw pictures that represent an idea or right from the CRC and post
them with the students’ elephants around the room.
Materials:
Horton Hears a Who by Dr. Seuss
Handout: Elephant Construction Pieces
Child-friendly version of The Convention
www.unicef.org/rightsite/484_540.htm
on
the
Rights
of
the
Child:
42
Curriculum for Gender Equity 4th Grade
English Gender Equity Activity 4
Subject: English
Fourth Grade
Unit 4.5 Non-Fiction Study
Standards and Expectations: 4L.1, 4.S2c 4.R.71, 4.R.91, 4.W.3 *, 4.LA.1
Duration: 120 minutes
Description: The students work in cooperative/ pair groups to write a list of questions and
interview their parents, grandparents or guardians about the jobs they had when young.
The students will compare each generation of jobs by using a T-Chart to establish male and
female jobs and years.
Purpose: Students will complete a T chart about their grandparents and parents jobs today.
They will answer the question: What are the differences between the jobs men and women
have done throughout time?
Objective: The students will write questions and interview family members about their jobs.
They will compare the gender with the jobs.
Example: A grandmother that works today as an engineer and a father that stays home as a
caretaker for the children.
Process:
1-The teacher provides the students with instructions to interview their family members about
their jobs. Including the students’ grandparents, parents or other family members.
2- The teacher requests students to give samples of questions.
3-The teacher will write sample questions on the board.
4– The teacher divides the students in pairs or groups. The students will complete the list of
questions and interview 2 family members. With the information obtained the students will
complete a T chart.
Grandparents
/
Parents
\
Other Family Members
5– Students compare their findings and they share with their peers.
Materials:
Board
Sample interview questions
Markers
T-Chart graphic organizer
Comic Strip worksheet
Pictures of haircuts (?)
Poster board
43
English Gender Equity Activity 5
Subject: English
Grade Fourth Grade
Unit: 4.6 Family Interviews
Standards and Expectations: 4.L.1c, 4.L.1e, 4.S.2c, 4R.3l, 4.R.9l
Duration: 120 minutes
Description: The students work in small groups drawing pictures that represent job shared
by both genders.
Process:
Initial
1-The teacher will present a Venn Diagram Graphic Organizer.
Title: Roles of Men and Women, Roles Shared Today.
2– The teacher will paste some samples and will encourage students to describe the
responsibilities of each job and how it is a matter of knowledge and skills. Oral discussion of
how every person can do each job.
Developmental:
Students will take turns presenting pictures and explaining who usually does the job and why.
Closing
Teacher helps the students to summarize the results of the Venn diagram
Materials:
Board
Pictures from magazines and newspapers
Poster board with a Venn diagram
Tape or glue.
44
45
46
English Gender Equity Activity 1
Subject: English
Grade: Fourth Grade
Unit: 4.1 Writing Dialogue
Standard and Expectation: 4.W.6, 4.S.5
Duration: 120 minutes
Description: After reading the story “The Paper Bag Princess”, by Robert Munsch the
students will compare the roles of the characters in the story. The student will describe the
internal and external character traits and their awareness of gender roles. Students will retell
the story changing the roles of the characters.
Purpose: Students will identify character traits and stereotypes of role models which are
different and represent gender equity.
Objective: After reading the story “The Paper Bag Princess” students will identify the
relationships of gender roles in the story. The students will write a dialogue using characters
exchanged gender roles and stereotypes that both, they and society, hold on men and
women.
Process:
Initial
The teacher asks the students to mention stories about a prince and a princess. Brainstorm
on gender stereotypes found in fairytale stories. Such as, Brave, Frozen, Pocahontas. They
will comment on their experiences. The teacher writes on the board the students’ responses.
Developmental:
The teacher will tell students to pay attention to roles of the characters in the story and
stereotypes. They can also share how the roles of a prince and princess have changed. Then
the teacher will present the story “The Paper Bag Princess” in copies, or video. Students will
answer the following questions according to the short story:
1. Who are the characters in the story?
2. Describe the characters roles and traits in the story.
3. How do the characters react in the story?
4. What stereotypes evolve from the story?
47
Closing
The teacher will write on the board “Describe the main characters “roles.
The students will describe how the characters reacted in the story and the stereotypes
developed.
Last, the students will give samples of changing gender roles.
Complete Character Traits Chart
Materials:
Board
Story “The Paper Bag Princess” (attachment pdf)
3. Character Traits Chart (Page1, 2 & 3 only)
48
49
50
English Gender Equity Activity 2
Subject: English
Grade: Fourth Grade
Unit: 4.3 Making Predictions, Inferences and Connections about Characters
Standard and Expectation: 4.R.1, 4.W.8
Duration: 120 minutes
Description: After reading the story “Hairs” (Attachment) the students will bring pictures of
different types of haircuts. Working in groups they will paste and classify the haircuts by
gender boy or girl. The students will talk about why they think we associate haircuts to
gender. How is this today? Students will complete a comic strip about getting a haircut that
we associate with a different gender.
Purpose: Students will identify haircuts associated with genders .The students will comment
on today's hair styles and how they are applied to anyone.
Objective: After reading the story “Hairs” (Attachments 4.3) the students will complete a
comic strip about a person getting a haircut that is associated with another sex creatively.
Process:
Initial
The teacher asks the students about how their hair grows and who decides the style of
haircut they get. They will comment on their experiences. The students will bring pictures of
haircuts from old magazines.
Developmental:
The teacher will explain to the students that they will paste a picture and describe the haircut
and who usually gets the style. The teacher and student will write a sentence for each picture
to include in Hamburger Paragraph. The gender equity theme will be emphasized by the
teacher.
Closing
Students will work in groups/ pairs completing a comic strip about a person getting a different
hair cut style associated with a the opposite sex.
Materials:
Board
Story Hairs (Attachment)
Comic Strip worksheet
Pictures of haircuts
Hamburger Paragraph
Poster board
51
Hairs
from The House on Mango Street
by Sandra Cisneros
Everybody in our family has different hair. My
Papa’s hair is like a broom, all up in the air. And
me, my hair is lazy. It never obeys barrettes or
bands. Carlos’ hair is thick and straight. He doesn’t
need to comb it. Nenny’s hair is slippery—slides
out of your hand. And Kiki, who is the youngest,
has hair like fur.
But my mother’s hair, my mother’s hair, like little
rosettes, like candy circles all curly and pretty
because she pinned it in pin curls all day, sweet to
put your nose into when she is holding you and
you feel safe, is the warm smell of bread before
you bake it, is the smell when she makes room for
you on her side of the bed still warm with her skin,
and you sleep near her, the rain outside falling and
Papa snoring. The snoring, the rain, and Mama’s
hair that smells like bread.
52
53
English Gender Equity Activity 3
Subject: English
Grade: Fourth Grade
Unit: 4.4 My Story: Exploring Figurative Language and the Writing Process
Standard and Expectation: 4.R.1, 4.W.8
Duration: 120 minutes
Description: After reading the story “The House on Mango Street” (Attachment provided)
the teacher will ask their students how they were given their names. Then the teacher will
give samples of names that are shared by women and men alike. The students will select a
name like “María” or “Angel” that is used by men and women in Puerto Rico. How would you
feel if you have a name that is often used for a male or a female?
Purpose: Students demonstrate respect to the names and the people. The students will
interview their parents, grandparents, other family members and neighbors about their
names. Students share with classmates.
Objective: After reading the story “The House on Mango Street “ (Attachment below) The
students will discuss questions about the story and complete a paragraph about a man or a
woman getting a new name with teacher guidance.
Procedure:
Initial
The teacher asks the students about how they got their names.
genders will be presented.
Names used by both
The teacher asks the following questions:
1. Are women diminished because of their strength?
2. Have men treated or treat women as property? Is it a type of violence?
3. Why was the grandmother full of sadness? Was she free?
4. Why does the main character repel the name itself, not wanting to be like her grandmother
and erases her name as “X” as if it was better to be nobody?
5. Why is the meaning of her name so important?
Note: Teachers must be prepared to deal with questions regarding transgender and
transsexual people that change their names. They must also be prepared to talk about
violence: Domestic Violence.
54
Developmental:
The teacher brainstorms on a given topic. Students will respond providing sentences. The
teacher will copy the sentences on the board.
Closing
The students will work in groups/ pairs to complete the paragraph. The students will share
their Work with the group. A discussion of names and gender bias will be developed
according to story and personal experiences.
Materials:
Board
“The House on Mango Street” short passage.
Paper
My Name
In English my name means hope. In Spanish it means too many letters. It means sadness, it
means waiting. It is like the number nine. A muddy color. It is the Mexican records my father
plays on Sunday mornings when he is shaving, songs like sobbing.
It was my great-grandmother's name and now it is mine. She was a horse woman too, born
like me in the Chinese year of the horse--which is supposed to be bad luck if you're born
female-but I think this is a Chinese lie because the Chinese, like the Mexicans, don't like their
women strong.
My great-grandmother, I would've liked to have known her, a wild, and a horse of a woman,
so wild she wouldn't marry. Until my great-grandfather threw a sack over her head and
carried her off. Just like that, as if she were a fancy chandelier. That's the way he did it.
And the story goes she never forgave him. She looked out the window her whole life, the way
so many women sit their sadness on an elbow. I wonder if she made the best with what she
got or was she sorry because she couldn't be all the things she wanted to be. Esperanza. I
have inherited her name, but I don't want to inherit her place by the window.
At school they say my name funny as if the syllables were made out of tin and hurt the roof of
your mouth. But in Spanish my name is made out of a softer something, like silver, not quite
as thick as sister's name Magdalena--which is uglier than mine. Magdalena who at least- can
come home and become Nenny. But I am always Esperanza, would like to baptize myself
under a new name, a name more like the real me, the one nobody sees. Esperanza as
Lisandra or Maritza or Zeze the X. Yes. Something like Zeze the X will do.
55
56
English Gender Equity Activity 5.1
Subject: English as a Second Language
Fifth Grade
Unit: 5.1: Communities Create Heroes
Standards and Expectations: 5.l.1.d, 5.R.1, 5.R.2L, 5.S.1, 5.W.8
Theme: “My Neighborhood hero is” Essay
Duration: 180 minutes
Description: In the following unit, “Communities Create Heroes”, students investigate and
search for positive role models in their neighborhood or society. In order to indicate the equity
of gender, each student will conduct a simple investigation process in looking for important
female role models that have contributed to their neighborhood or society. With this
information the student may execute a character trait description poster. This poster will be
presented to the classmates.
Purpose: The Purpose of this activity is to discover positive female role models in society.
Objectives: After brainstorming the concepts: hero, neighborhood, and society the student
will:
Short term
 recognize influential female role models in Puerto Rico with teacher guidance.
 listen attentively and with open mind to all viewpoints with respect, and.
 analyze the positive attributes of each role model.
Long term
 develop independent thinking regarding standardized gender roles.
 develop appreciation of female roles and their positive contributions to our
society.
Steps/ Process
Initial: Defining concepts such as “Hero”, “Neighborhood”, and “Society”.
 Brainstorm the terms provided.
 Guided questions to guide students into nonfiction heroes.
Developmental: Identifying specific heroes




Students make a checklist of Male and Female known heroes or heroines.
Each student choose 1 male and 1 female hero/heroine from the checklist.
Students undergo a simple investigation of the hero or heroine chosen.
The student creates a character description poster based on the person.
Closing: Presentation
 Students present the posters to his/her classmates.
57
Materials:
Posters
Crayons
Markers
Pictures
Library
Computer lab (if available)
58
English Equity Gender Activity 2
Subject: English as a Second Language
Grade: Fifth grade
Unit: 5.1: “Leaders in my community”
Standards and Expectations: 5.L.1a, 5L1b, 5.R.3.L, 5.R.9L, 5.S.1, 5.S.5
Theme: Finding leaders through literature
Duration: 120 minutes
Description: In the following unit, “Leaders in my community”, students will read two
compositions based on one male and one female leader. After reading these compositions,
orally and through group work, the students will compare and contrast the characteristics of
both leaders and their experiences in a Venn diagram.
Purpose: The Purpose of this activity is for the students to analyze the importance of each
sex recognition role in the accomplishments that identifies them as a leader. Additionally,
students are to recognize each leader’s challenges.
Objectives: After identifying female and male leaders the student will:
Short term
 recognize influential characteristics that leaders provide.
 listen attentively and with open mind to all viewpoints.
 analyze the positive attributes of each male and female as a leader.
Long term
 develop independent thinking regarding standardized gender roles.
 develop appreciation that both female and male leaders may accomplish the
same goal.
Steps/ Process
Initial: Activate Background Knowledge
 Guided questions to help the students identify the female and male leader that
they are going to work with.
Example of Guide Questions:
1. Identify male/female role leaders in your community.
2. Would you like to be like the role leader of your community?
3. What qualities does this role leader have that make you want to be like either
one?
4. Are those qualities of a specific gender?
5. Did their gender pass an obstacle in achieving their goal?
 Show a video/ pictures or power point that has each leader in order for the
students to describe and explore the targeted leaders.
Developmental: Reading Comprehension and analyzing process
59
 Students read two different short passages about each leader.
 Questions, provided by the teacher, will be given to review story elements and
relevant events of each passage.
 After a group debate, the students will create a Venn diagram of each leader,
therefore comparing and contrasting their characteristics and experiences with
each other.
Closing: Dialogue Journal
 Students choose one leader in order to describe the person and explain the
reason this person was preferred above the others.
Materials:
Posters
Markers
Worksheets
Projector
Computer lab
White board
Reading Examples:





Sonia Sotomayor
Esmeralda Santiago
Tomas Rivera ( Writer)
Ricky Martin
Rita Moreno
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What Constitutes a Role Model?
Characteristics of positive role models include:
Feels a sense of duty to better "society" or work for the common good of the
Community.
Compassionate
has developed powerful and effective habits of the mind and soul
can work through challenges
Committed to what he or she does
Capacity to achieve goals and obtain self-fulfillment
possesses high standards and values
Admired for courage and strength
Models forgiveness
Trustworthy
Demonstrates humility
Peaceful
Wise
Admits when they are wrong
genuine love
Discernment - understands the whole situation
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English Equity Gender Activity 3
Subject: English as a Second Language
Grade: Fifth grade
Unit: 5.7: “Issues facing the local community”
Standards and Expectations: 5.L.1, 5.LA.6, 5.R.9I, 5.S.4, 5.S.6, 5.W.1,
Theme: Problems in the community
Duration: 180 minutes
Description: Create a speech about a problem of gender inequality in the community,
researching the issue and proposing possible solutions as the person persuades community
members to take action. A suggestion of speech topics that are abuse against women,
children, the elderly or of bullying because of sexual orientation or gender identity.
Purpose: The Purpose of this activity is for students to investigate the current events in their
culture and society.
Objectives: After recognizing society problems, the student will:
Short term
 investigate a current events that is affecting him/her related gender.
 identify social problems related to gender inequity.
Long term
 develop independent thinking regarding standardized gender roles.
 develop investigation and critical thinking skills.
Steps/ Process
Initial: Recognizing problems in our society.
 Group discussion of problems in our society.
 Graphic organizer to demonstrate the ideas of the students’ base of the theme
problems in our society.
Developmental: Newspaper relations
 Students will choose different articles from the newspaper based on acts of
violence.
 The teacher provides a guideline for the speech.
Closing: Oral speech
 Students give the oral presentation. The speech can be recorded in order to give
constructive criticism. A rubric will be created by the educator.
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Materials:
Newspaper
Markers
Computer
Projector
Poster
White board
Camera
63
English Gender Equity Activity 4
Subject: English as a Second Language
Grade: Fifth
Unit: 5.3 Discovering My Neighbors
Standards and Expectations: 5.L.1d, 5.R.2b, 5.R.4L, 5.S.5, 5.W, 7
Theme: An influenced neighborhood character
Duration: 120 minutes
Description: In the following unit “Discovering my Neighborhood “students will choose two
important people from their neighborhood or community. Students will search for positive
roles in the life of the male or female. Students are to show his/her critical thinking of
character selected by writing a Reader’s Response letter.
Purpose: The activity is to discover important female and male roles in our communities.
Objectives:
Short Term
After identifying influential male and female roles in their neighborhood, the student
will: analyze positive roles with the teacher’s help.
Long Term
 Develop appreciation of female or male characters in neighborhoods.
Process/Steps
Initial: Character selection
 Guided questions for students to select role models from their community or society.
 Provide a list of diverse human characteristics.
Development
 Identify importance of characters from communities or society as important role
models.
 Explain importance of selecting two role models from community.
 Investigate information about role models.
 Discuss how these role models are different from gender roles.
Closing
 Prepare a letter about male/female role models and their roles in the community or
society.
 Hand in a letter to teacher.
 Prepare an oral presentation of letter about male/female role models.
Materials:
Paper
Markers
Board
Notebooks
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English Gender Equity Activity 5
Subject: English as a Second Language
Grade: Fifth
Unit: 5.4 Community Celebrations
Standards and Expectations: 5L1a, 5R2I, 5S2, 5W6
Theme: “Celebrations around the World”
Duration: 120 minutes
Description: In the following unit “Community Celebrations” there are various cultural
aspects. This is for students to establish connections with worldwide roles to create
awareness of male/females and their roles.
Purpose: The Purpose of Community Celebrations is to create awareness of male and
female roles in different cultures and think/reflect on them.
Objectives: After brainstorming about gender roles around the world, the student will,
Short Term
 recognize roles based on male and female retrospectives.
 listen attentively and with open mind to all viewpoints.
 analyze the difference between gender roles around the world.
 analyze how gender roles are based on stereotypes.
Long Term
 Develop awareness of gender roles around the world.
 Recognize celebrations of our community and around the world.
 Analyze importance of community celebrations around the world and relate to own
community.
 Evaluate how gender roles have changed in the last decades.
Process/Steps
Initial
Discussion regarding:
 What celebrations / customs are detrimental to women’s health, life and wellbeing?
 What is the celebration about? - For instance, Thanksgiving Day
 Where there women within the pilgrims?
 What roles did the women have, if any? How about now, what roles do the women
play during that celebration?
 Cooking / cleaning / decorating / who else can carry out these chores?
 Which ones are beneficial?
 How can we make a culture change when it supports the wrong things?
 Video based on celebrations and discussion
 Compare and contrast different celebrations with personal customs.
Developmental
 Identify male and female roles in different celebrations and distinguish which ones are
part of stereotypes.
65
 Out of four celebrations (Christmas, Hanukah,) the student will choose the celebration
that most resembles the festivity that hey celebrate.
 The students identify the roles of male/female and their culture and celebration.
 Students will use graphic organizer to establish differences and similarities of the
gender roles.
Closing
 A class debate may be given to ask opinions about gender
 A poem about celebrations may be prepared
Materials
Posters
Crayons
Markers
Paper
Pictures
Notebooks
66
English Equity Gender Activity 1
Sixth Grade
Unit: 6.1 Characters Facing Challenges
Standards and Expectations
6. LA.4b
6. R.1
6. S.2b
6. S.6a
6. W.8
Theme: Puerto Rican women and men that have challenges with language in another
country.
Duration: Sixty minutes
Description: The student mentions Puerto Rican’s facing challenges with language in
another country.
Purpose: Recognize how the main character and the individual men and woman from Puerto
Rico challenge language barriers in another country.
Objectives: After defining language barriers, the student will,
-Identify gender and /or race-biased language with the vocabulary we use in
everyday life correctly.
-Understand the importance of a spoken language in another Country.
-
Recognize challenges in male and female Experiences in another country
appropriately
Procedure:
1. Introduction: Defining the language barriers according to short story read in class
with unit 6.1
 Hand out copies of “Occupation Checklist” to individual students. (See
attachments)
 Read off the listed occupations.
 Describe any jobs that students might not be familiar with.
2. Have students fill out checklist, matching occupations to Male, Female, or both by
circling the correct response.
3. Discuss a hand out “Gender Language” worksheet about women/men race biased
language in order to recognized male/female occupations. Ask students, “What
you think, how do challenges lead to a new learning in day life?
67
4. Have each student share their answer in class.
5. Discuss how jobs/occupations are not exclusive of a specific gender.
Materials:
Occupation Checklist
Pencils
Newspapers
Evaluation: Assess students’ completion of checklist; assess involvement in survey, group
discussion and other assigned work.
68
English Equity Gender Activity 2
Grade: Sixth
Unit: 6.2 Non-Fiction Study: Challenges Facing Communities
Standard and Expectations
6. L.1
6. R.1
6. R.2l
6. R.4l
6. R.10
6. W.8
6. LA.4
6. LA.4
6. LA.4a
6. LA.6
Theme: Reading Non-Fiction Text from important male/ female role models.
Duration: Sixty minutes
Description: The student creates a checklist of male/female role models.
Purpose: The student will investigate different newspaper, magazines and text with
important male/female Role models from the communities.
Objectives: After defining role model, the student will,
-Develop vocabulary words that are gender and race neutral.
-Recognize the vocabulary words, gender and in race neutral.
-Recognize neutral role models male/female from the community in the
newspapers, text, Magazine and web.
-Understand that “role model “is not “gender role”.
Materials:
“Role model characteristics” worksheet
Index cards (3”x 5”)
Overhead projector
Transparencies
Procedure:
1. Introduction: Define the word role model traits in a checklist.
2. Have students fill a checklist of difference male/female role model.
69
3. Using transparencies and an overhead projector the student will see each
occupation
To complete his role model checklist.
4. The student will search for kinds of traits and occupations from a checklist of
Neutral role models.
5. Class should discuss any other issues concerning male/female role model.
Why some occupations are traditionally gender designated? Is this fair? How can
we change this?
Evaluation: Assess students’ completion of checklist; assess involvement in survey,
group Discussion and other assigned work relevant to theme of Unit 6.2.
70
English Equity Gender Activity 3
Grade Sixth
Unit: 6.3 Non-Fiction Study: Newspapers and Current Events.
Standards and Expectations:
6. L.1a
6. L.1c
6. S.2
6. S.2a
6. S.2c
6. S.3
6. S.4
6. R.3l
6. R.4.l
6. R.6l
6. R.8
6. R.9l
6. W.1
6. W.5
6. W.7
6. W.8
6. LA1
6. LA.1a
6. LA.1g
6. LA.2a
6. LA.3a
6. LA.5d
6. LA.5ª
Theme: Female and Male Expository Text Features: Newspapers.
Duration: Sixty minutes.
Description: The student writes a news article about peoples’ efforts as workers and
community helpers.
Purpose: Recognize effort as workers and community helpers.
Objectives: -Students will write a three paragraph essay effectively about a female or
male worker as a community helper in their country.
Develop interest towards the female and male worker and the importance of
both in the community and the country.
-Recognize current events and situations around a female and male worker
in
daily life in a news article.
71
Procedure:
1. Have students recognize female and male community helpers and workers
in their country.
2. Consider female and male importance in the community, write a three
paragraph essay about how they make the greatest effort in their community
and cities.
3. Have each student identify and collect examples of different female and male
text features in a newspaper. See how many different female and male
community helpers they come up with. Talk about the differences of each
individual character in the community or cities mentioned.
4. Using the examples from the newspapers asks students if they understand
the importance of each female and male in the community or cities before
completing a news article about community helpers or workers.
5 Analyze characteristics of helpers and whether those characteristics are
exclusive of women or men.
Materials:
Newspapers
Markers
Rulers
Evaluation: Evaluate students’ writing news article about each female and male
community helpers or workers.
72
English Equity Gender Activity 4
Grade: Sixth
Unit 6.4: Memoirs: Exploring Personal Challenges
Standard and Expectations
6. R.4L
6. LA.4
6. LA.4a
6. LA.4b
6. LA.4c
6. LA.4d
6. LA.5c
Theme: Memoirs of Puerto Rican actors and actresses who encountered a new and
unknown language while living in another country.
Duration: 120 minutes.
Description: The student is going to create an acting reader’s theater from a memoirs
text.
.
Examples: (Esmeralda Santiago and José Ferrer)
Purpose: Understand how Puerto Rican actors and actresses challenge new language
learning in another country.
Objectives: After reading and acting out a character, the student will
-Identify gender and /or race-biased language with the vocabulary we use in
everyday life correctly.
-Understand the exclusive nature of the use of this new language.
-Develop and recognize a new language that is gender and race neutral.
-Challenge others to use gender and race neutral language.
73
Procedure:
1. Acting in a class theater interpreting a Puerto Rican writer like Esmeralda
Santiago in When I Was a Puerto Rican and an actor as Jose Ferrer to
search how they encounter new and unknown language in another country?
Students must emphasize the nature of new language, its use by gender and
race
2. After discussing the memoirs of Esmeralda Santiago and José Ferrer, have
students think about ways to document their own lives by writing a script.
3. Have groups of two students recognize experiences of fair and neutral
gender/race situations in both Puerto Rican actors.
4. Talk about the life of the actor or actress to be interpreted in a life drama.
5. The students act in a class theater representing Esmeralda Santiago and
José Ferrer.
6. Talk about memoirs or other Puerto Rican writers who have traveled to other
countries and learned the English language.
Materials:
Note cards and markers
Gender language worksheet
Script worksheet
Evaluation:
Evaluate students’ class participation used by two groups (drama and lists
to see behavior during the acting time and a writing and oral rubric).
74
English Equity Gender Activity 5
Grade: Sixth
Unit: 6.5 Exploring Poetry
Standard and Expectations
6. L.1
6. S.3
6. R.7L
6. W.7
6. W.8
6. LA.1h
6. LA.5
6. LA.5a
6. LA.5b
6. LA.5c
Theme: The student selects a poem written by a male writer and a female writer to
present to the class.
Duration: 120 minutes.
Description: The student reads the short poem to the class.
Purpose: The student will select two short poems from important male and female
writers from other countries to read and discuss similarities and differences in class.
Objective: Read and understand gender race-biased language used in everyday life.
Process:
1. Have student investigate and select different short poems from text by
important male and female writers from different countries.
2. Consider choosing one short poem from a male and female to distinguish
similarities and differences within each poem.
3. Have student read the short poem in class.
Materials:
Poems examples
Gender language worksheet
Note cards and markers.
Evaluation: Evaluate students’ work, class participation, and behavior during the
reading.
75
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Seventh Grade
Unit 7.1: Being Puerto Rican through Folktales
PRCS: 7.L.1b 7.L.1d 7.LA.1a 7.LA.1b 7.LA.2a 7.LA.2b 7.LA.3a 7.R.3L 7.R.5L 7.S.1
7.S.2a 7.S.4 7.W.4
Theme: Reader’s Theater: Adapt a Puerto Rican Folktale in to a Play changing roles
according to gender equity.
Duration: 120 min.
Description: Adapting a traditional folktale to “The Pesky Goat”
Purpose: To value and illustrate the traditional roles within a new gender perspective.
Objectives: After evaluating traditional folktales the student will write a play adapting a
Puerto Rican Folktale exploring a gender equity theme with the help of the teacher.
Steps:
Initial:
1. Open discussion on gender roles within various traditional folktales.
2. Choose a Traditional folktale to rewrite from different gender perspective.
3. Example: Josefina (Pesky Goat to Don José or her being a mechanic)
Suggestion
Development:
1. The student edits and revises the text of a Puerto Rican folktale into a play
format (cutting out lines, revising narration by shortening it for the narrator)
(see Attachment: 7.1 Performance Task – Sample Reader’s Theater Script).
2. The student revises and proofreads the script to ensure it has the description
of setting, characters, problem and solution, and dialogue of characters.
 Guidance on how to adapt a story to a script:
http://www.aaronshep.com/rt/Tips1.html
 Guidance on how to stage a play:
http://www.aaronshep.com/rt/Tips2.html
Closing:
 The teacher chooses to have all students perform in one or two plays, The
students select roles (have multiple narrators) and crew (directors, props,
plan and create background scenery).
 Guidance on how to read or perform a play:
http://www.aaronshep.com/rt/Tips3.html
Materials:
Various Folktales
Attachment: 7.1 Performance Task – Sample Reader’s Theater Script
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Seventh
Unit 7.2: Puerto Rico Travel Brochure
PRCS: 7.L.1b 7.L.1d 7.LA.1a 7.LA.1b 7.LA.2a 7.LA.2b 7.LA.3a 7.R.3L 7.R.5L 7.S.1
7.S.2a 7.S.4 7.W.4
Theme: Women in Puerto Rico Today
Duration: 120 min.
Description: Evaluating women roles in today’s society
Purpose: To value and illustrate the traditional roles within a new gender perspective.
Objective: After evaluating women in society the student will write an expository
paragraph describing the women chosen.
Procedures:
Initial:
1. The student selects and researches women in Puerto Rican society of whom
they are proud of.
2. Teacher initiates class discussion of the role of women in today’s society.
Development:
1. The student will write an expository paragraph describing a woman and her role
in today’s society.
2. The teacher selects a graphic organizer that will best help organize information
(See Attachments: 7.2 Graphic Organizer – Sequencing Chart, 7.2 Graphic
Organizer – Timeline, 7.2 Graphic Organizer – Main Idea and Details Pyramid,
7.2 Graphic Organizer – Cause and Effect, and 7.2 Graphic Organizer – Venn
Lines)
3. The student must use the rainbow writing strategy to organize paragraphs (See
Attachment: 7.2 Performance Task – Rainbow Writing Paragraph Organizer).
4. The teacher has students engage in peer and self-editing (See Attachment: 7.2
Writing Tool – Paragraph Checklist
Closing:
1. The students illustrate a poster that portraits the theme of their paragraph and
present it to the class.
Materials:
7.2 Graphic Organizer – Sequencing Chart,
7.2 Graphic Organizer – Timeline,
7.2 Graphic Organizer – Main Idea and Details Pyramid,
7.2 Graphic Organizer – Cause and Effect,
7.2 Graphic Organizer – Venn Lines
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Activity Guide
Genre Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Seventh
Unit: 7.3: Poetry: My Identity
PRCS: 7.W.2 7.W.6 7.W.7
Theme: Strong Women and Gentle Men
Duration: 120 min
Description: Using poetry to express our own gender perspective
Purpose: To value and illustrate the traditional roles within a new gender perspective.
Objective: After class discussion the student will analyze the role that different gender
roles and how popular culture influences them.
Procedures:
Initial: Have a class discussion on
1. Who are the leaders in your school, community or country? Are they male or
female?
2. What do you think is meant by "strong women" and "gentle men"?
3. Now, as then, we are shaped by the images around us. Imagine if your
community had a "Whites Only" sign up for water fountains or restrooms. How
would that shape (or misshape) your identity? The power to resist and to rebel
rests in being able to see things differently than the way things are presented to
you.
4. Non-violence requires women and men to accomplish their goals. In this lesson,
students will take popular magazines and look at how the media portray girls and
boys differently.
Development:
1. Found Poem
 A Found Poem is made up of words or phrases from something you read. It
uses someone else's words, but in a new way. Students can, of course, find
words in newspapers, magazines, pieces of literature, documents, oral
histories and narratives. They also can be spoken words that students hear in
the hallways or
 at the lunchroom or other.
 Guide students in creating Found Poems that address the gender roles and
expectations affecting their lives:
 Step One Flip through a magazine or piece of literature and cut out words
that catch your eye.
 Step Two Choose 10 main key words or phrases that describe how you see
each gender represented or addressed.
 Step Three Arrange these words or phrases in a pleasing and meaningful
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


way to make a poem. Write, type or use the pieces you've ripped out of
magazines. Glue them to poster board. Illustrate it with drawings or pictures.
After you do one for both genders, what do you notice when you compare and
contrast font size and color? Why do you think magazine people chose these
for each gender?
Step Four Write or find a response to how you see genders represented
differently in the media and explain your poem to the class.
Step Five Where can you strategically put this poem for others to see it? Who
is your audience? Why is it important that they see it?
Closing:
Follow-up Discussion
1. Do these poems represent gender bias students? Why or why not?
2. Can gender be fluid?
3. Can all genders have all attributes?
Found Poems Model Encourage students to arrange their poster boards as
shown in the model PDF of the poem below.
Every Girl Every Boy by Crimethinc
For every girl who is tired of acting weak when she is strong, there is a boy tired
of appearing strong when he feels vulnerable. For every boy who is burdened
with the constant expectation of knowing everything, there is a girl tired of people
not trusting her intelligence. For every girl who is tired of being called oversensitive, there is a boy who fears to be gentle, to weep. For every boy for whom
competition is the only way to prove his masculinity, there is a girl who is called
unfeminine when she competes. For every girl who throws out her E-Z-Bake
oven, there is a boy who wishes to find one. For every boy struggling not to let
advertising dictate his desires, there is a girl facing the ad industry’s attacks on
her self-esteem. For every girl who takes a step toward her liberation, there is a
boy who finds the way to freedom a little easier.
Materials:
Scissors
Glue
Poster-board
Several magazines
Model Found Poem handout
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Seventh
Unit: 7.4: Author’s Purpose
PRCS: 7.R.3I, 7.W.1, 7.W.4, 7.W.5, 7.W.7, 7.W.8
Theme: Meeting Women Writers from our country and their Purpose
Duration: 120 min
Description:
Purpose: To value and illustrate the traditional roles within a new gender perspective.
Objective: After discussing various women writers the student will identify women
writers and author’s Purpose correctly.
Initial:
Discussion Starters

Choose a woman writer -- Gloria Anzaldúa, Mitsuye Yamada, Tillie Olsen, for
instance. Who is she? Are you familiar with her works? Is she a major writer?
Why or why not?

What obstacles did women face in trying to write, to get published? Do these
obstacles exist today?

Why have women writers been largely left out of mainstream anthologies?
The Internet is a wonderful vehicle to help students get acquainted with the many
female writers who were once published but have been lost in obscurity. Such
Web sites as A Celebration of Women Writers can help students identify many
women writers. As a warm-up exercise, ask students to search by author name
at the Celebration site and address the following questions:

What other works did Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (related by birth and
marriage to three famous reformer-writers, and most famous for
penning Frankenstein) write in the latter part of her career? Do you think she is a
feminist given her roles as dutiful wife and mother?

Who is Harriet A. Jacobs? What is the title of her work? Can you find writings
by other women slaves? List them.

Who are Jerema Lee, Zelpha Elaw and Elizabeth (-surname unknown) (1766c. 1866)? Can you identify other women preachers and their works? What roles
did these women preachers play within their church and in relation to their male
counterparts?

Who is Sarah Moore Grimke? What writings by other suffragists can you find?
Development
1. Have students choose two Black women writers and prepare a presentation about
them. The presentation should include a brief biography, the reading of a selection from
their works, and some visual (e.g., poster, collage, sculpture) to demonstrate the
student's interpretation of the woman's life and works.
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2. Choose two women writers, a white woman and a Black woman who are/were
contemporaries of one another. Compare and contrast the circumstances in which they
wrote (e.g., what is their economic background? Are they free, married, enslaved or
colonized?). How were their works published and received?
Closing:
The students will present their research to class.
Materials
Read: The "Lost" Writer
Difficult as it may be, the search is a valuable learning experience. Students are
amazed at how many women's works are out of print. One student observed: "If these
women tried to do anything academic or creative, every barrier in the world was placed
against them.
It is amazing to rediscover these women who faced almost
insurmountable obstacles throughout their writing careers." Another said, "It made me
realize how easily someone who was successful and talented can be not only forgotten
but almost erased."
Equally rewarding are the public readings, which are advertised college-wide. The
noontime event with refreshments draws students from other literature classes, some
faculty, staff and, often, several parents. The readings offer a special forum not only for
the otherwise "lost" writers, but also for the students' own articulations. Tavia Moody, a
bright, attentive 20-year-old student, explains why she chose a piece written by Maria
Jane Jewsbury in her twenties to a young woman friend: "The passage was about what
education had meant to her, about what reading and writing meant to her." For Moody,
the issues of women's relationships and learning are germane to her own choices as a
young college woman.
Other students read passages from Fanny Fern, Rebecca Harding and Gertrude Stein,
for example that reflect their concerns: marriage, mother/daughter relations,
independence and "beauty." Each student reads strongly and with pride. You can see
their faces light up when the audience asks for copies of the passages they read.
The Women and Literature course is important to me because women writers have
changed my life in so many ways; in a personal and professional aspect. I feel
passionate about writers like Luci Tapahonso, a wonderful, Native American lyrical poet
and storyteller whose work remains largely unknown in the classroom. Equally
important, my students feel moved and encouraged by these forgotten lives and works.
What's more, they have now acquired the tools to discover forgotten women writers on
their own.
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The Web has made possible the re-emergence of women writers who were once
influential but are less known today, such as Margaret Fuller (1810-50, writer and
journalist who inspired the women's rights and Transcendentalist movements); ZitkalaSa (1876-1937, author of many works, including Old Indian Legends and
autobiographies about Native American experience); and Margaret Askew Fell [aka
Margaret Fox] (1614 - 1702, Quaker leader who championed the equality
of________________________________________.
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Seventh
Unit 7.5: Persuade and Present
PRCS: 7.R.8, 7.W.2, 7.W.4, 7.W.6, 7.W.7, 7.W.8
Theme: Going to Bat for Girls Activity
Duration: 240 min
Description: Gender Equity
Purpose: To value and illustrate the traditional roles within a new gender perspective.
Objective: After evaluating male and female roles in different scenarios the student will
write an essay, illustrate and pursue roles in new gender perspective with creativity.
Procedures:
Initial: Discuss Gender Equity with students
Development:
1. Read Article “Going to Bat for Girls”
2. Discussion Questions
Answers will vary. The following are basic points that may be covered.
• Who is the central character of this story, and what is her challenge?
Naomi Fritson is a Nebraska farm wife and mother. With great
courage and sacrifice, she sets out to gain equal opportunities for
her daughter and other girls in school sports.
•List and discuss three examples of gender inequity in the Minden,
Neb., school sports program at the time of this story. How does Title
IX address your examples?
The pep band routinely played at boys' games and rarely at girls'
games; girls were required to play in the inferior gym; football games
were scheduled for the most popular times -- Friday and Saturday
nights. Title IX specifically states that boys and girls should have equal
opportunities in the exercise of their athletic interests, the use of
equipment, travel arrangements, coaching opportunities, locker room
and competitive facilities, publicity and scheduling of games.
• Why did Naomi decide to challenge her school district in court?
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Naomi filed a Title IX lawsuit because nothing was being done to
change the policies after repeated attempts on her part to bring about
gender equity in sports.
• Describe the effects Naomi's complaint and lawsuit had on her family,
community and friends. What were some of the sacrifices made by
members of Naomi's family while the case was being litigated?
Within the family, Naomi's father told people that he was ashamed of
her; Sarah found herself becoming increasingly isolated from her
friends. In the community, newspapers published demeaning cartoons;
Naomi received angry letters and obscene phone calls; other parents
refused to sit near her at sporting events. Naomi's family made
tremendous sacrifices during the litigation period. Naomi and Dean
donated several thousand dollars for bats, balls and mitts to equip a
girls' team. Naomi shuttled the girls to games. Sarah joined the
baseball team. Dean's coaching schedule caused him to neglect his
crops.
• How did Naomi's lawsuit affect the sports programs in Nebraska?
Why do you think this happened?
Naomi's efforts had a domino effect on Nebraska's school systems.
Fearing lawsuits, several school systems took it upon themselves to
improve their girls' sports programs and add softball.
• How do boys' and girls' sports opportunities compare at your school?
Answers will vary.
Choose from the following activities:
3. Write a personal essay on gender equity, considering questions such
as the following: From your own experience and observation, in what
ways are males and females at your school and in your community
treated differently because of their gender? How do you and your
peers view those differences? What makes some differences in
treatment more acceptable than others? Which ones would you most
like to change, and why? In mixed-gender groups of four or five,
exchange essays and discuss.
4. Collect the sports pages from your local paper for several weeks.
Create a visual representation comparing coverage of male and female
sports events and participants. Share with the class. Write a letter to
your local newspaper based on your findings.
Closing: Share and present essay with visual representation to the class.
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Materials:
"Going to Bat for Girls" article
Recompilation of Sport related news where women are portrayed.
Vocabulary
• gender equity (fair distribution of benefits, power, resources and responsibilities
between women and men)
•inequities (instances of unfair or unequal treatment)
• preferential (giving advantages to one person or group over another)
• settlement (an understanding reached to resolve a conflict)
•Title IX (a 1972 federal law requiring federally funded schools to give females
the same opportunities as males in all education programs)
85
Going to Bat for Girls
Two hundred years ago, it was widely believed women had a smaller capacity to learn
than men. As a result, the educational system was geared primarily toward males.
Over time, women fought against — and toppled — many of the barriers that prevented
them from getting an equal education. But as recently as 30 years ago, they still faced
daunting hurdles.
Studies showed female students were being shortchanged from grade school through
graduate school. In fact, many colleges and professional schools set limits on the
number of young women they would admit. Others refused to admit women at all.
In 1972, Congress acted to eliminate gender discrimination in schools by passing what
is referred to as "Title IX" of the Education Amendment Act. It requires federally funded
schools to give females the same opportunities as males in all education programs,
including athletics.
In principle, the law was simple. But getting schools to comply with Title IX has been
another story. One family in Nebraska seeking equal resources for girls at their
community high school found out just how resistant to change some people can be.
The events that changed Naomi Fritson's life — and the lives of high school students
across Nebraska — began on a cold March night in 1992.
Fritson, a part-time school bus driver, went to watch a girls' basketball game in the small
farming town of Minden where she lives. But when she arrived at the school's main
gym, Fritson was told that the game had been moved to a lesser facility known as the
"girls' gym."
The reason for the change: A boys' game had been rescheduled and the boys always
played in the main gym.
The explanation unsettled her.
The main gym, after all, could seat about 500 spectators; the girls' gym only about 50.
The main gym had a new sound system, a concession stand and a public restroom; the
girls' gym had none of these features. Moreover, the main gym housed all the locker
rooms, which meant the girls had to change into their shirts and shorts and run outdoors
— often in frigid temperatures — to the girls' gym.
These inequities troubled Fritson. Her own daughter, Sarah Casper, was about to begin
high school. Fritson worried that the preferential treatment boys received at school
would make Sarah feel she was somehow less important than her male peers or her
two younger brothers.
Fritson raised the topic with other parents and learned that many of them had also
noticed the difference in how young male and female athletes were treated at the high
86
school. But no one, she found, was willing to speak up about it. Several mothers said
simply: "It's only four years. You'll get used to it."
But Fritson wasn't about to "get used to" a situation that could harm her daughter. She
was prepared to fight for what was fair, even if it meant challenging authority and going
against public opinion.
A community of about 2,700 people, Minden is dominated by cornfields as far as the
eye can see. In late summer, the stalks tower head-high. In the evening, the dust from
the fields rises up and meets the last rays of sun, creating dramatic red sunsets in the
vast sky.
Minden is a community that takes great pride in its pioneer past. A sprawling museum in
the center of town and billboards for miles around constantly remind residents that
frontiers people passed this way in the mid-1800s as they headed west in search of
gold, religious freedom and adventure.
Fritson was born and raised here. In Fritson's family, her father made all the decisions,
and her mother -- like many women of her generation -- quietly followed along. But
somehow Fritson developed an irrepressible drive to think for herself. So, on a winter
day in 1992, Fritson went home to the 1,000-acre corn and cattle farm where her family
lives and fired off a letter to the school superintendent.
"Whether outright or subconsciously, these girls are going through the Minden system
treated, and feeling, like second-class citizens," Fritson wrote. As evidence, she pointed
out three examples of unequal treatment. First, the pep band routinely played at boys'
games and rarely at girls' games. Second, girls were required to play in the inferior gym.
And, third, football games were scheduled for the most popular times -- Friday and
Saturday nights -- while girls' volleyball games were held during the week when the
crowds were smaller and the athletes would have to squeeze in homework after the
game.
When Fritson met with the superintendent, he agreed that gender equity was important.
But he argued that football had to be played on the weekend and girls' games during the
week because fans were more interested in boys' sports than girls'.
The superintendent's response only fueled Fritson's anger. She pounded out another
letter. People weren't naturally more interested in boys' sports than girls', she wrote. The
school encouraged that attitude by treating female athletes as second-rate; they offered
girls fewer teams to play on, inferior athletic equipment, poorly maintained fields, older
buses, fewer and less experienced coaches, and less publicity.
It was true, the superintendent agreed, that girls were sometimes shortchanged when it
came to resources. That was unfair and should be corrected. But one thing would not
change, he insisted, and that was Friday night football. The school depended on income
from its fans, and they were most likely to attend weekend games.
87
Fritson attended more meetings and wrote more letters, but still nothing happened.
Then she remembered a poster she had seen hanging in a school hallway. It said if
students felt they had been discriminated against, they could file a Title IX complaint
with the Office of Civil Rights.
Fritson had never heard of Title IX, but she soon learned it was a federal law that
required all public schools to offer equal opportunities to boys and girls or lose funding.
Many Title IX battles focused on the funding of girls' sports programs.
Since its introduction in 1972, Title IX had been quietly opening doors for female
athletes, and they were bounding through. In fact, when Naomi attended high school in
the 1960s there were no girls' athletic teams in Minden at all.
Administrators had decided years before that sports made girls "unladylike." Minden
had indeed come a long way since Fritson's school days. But as far as she was
concerned, it still had a long way to go in creating a level playing field for girls.
However, Fritson didn't want to file a formal complaint. Her kids attended the schools,
and she loved her job working as a bus driver. She suggested that the administration
ask a Title IX representative to discuss the issue with them. The school superintendent
agreed, and at the end of the meeting, Fritson left with a copy of the law in her hands.
That night, she and her husband sat at the kitchen table and looked the law over. It said
that boys and girls should have equal opportunities in the exercise of their athletic
interests, the use of equipment, travel arrangements, coaching opportunities, locker
room and competitive facilities, publicity and scheduling of games.
On almost every point she had raised, Fritson realized there was a federal law backing
her up. Now that administrators were better informed about the law as well, she was
optimistic that things would change. But months went by and still nothing happened.
Fritson filed a complaint.
The Office of Civil Rights had assured her that the complaint would be confidential. But
her name soon showed up in the newspaper. When Fritson contacted the Office of Civil
Rights to ask what happened, she recalls, they said her name had slipped out. In a big
city, it might have been a minor problem. In this small town, it was a big one.
People in Minden, surrounding communities and across the state erupted in fury -- not
at the school's alleged discrimination against girls but at Fritson. As one television
reporter put it, she had challenged "a nearly sacred ritual" -- Friday night football -- and
had "the gall" to ask: Why can't boys and girls share the weekend spot? Meanwhile,
rumors spread that her demands for equality could lead to cuts in football, a sport one
local minister is said to have described as "Nebraska's state God."
Newspapers published demeaning cartoons, caricaturing Fritson as a crank, and people
posted them in stores. Unknown voices woke her with obscene calls in the middle of the
night. When she attended sports events, other parents avoided sitting near her. Boys
88
shouted obscenities at her as she walked across the school grounds. Even her father
told people he was ashamed of her, adding: "I don't know how I failed in bringing her
up."
Fritson wasn't the only family member who felt the sting of the attacks. Sarah didn't talk
much about her feelings, but her mother knew the controversy was hard on her. Since
Fritson had begun this battle, Sarah had grown increasingly isolated.
"I thought I had all these friends," Sarah later told a newspaper reporter, "and all of a
sudden, they wouldn't look at me."
Worried that she was ruining her daughter's high school years, Fritson broke down in
tears. Yet she couldn't imagine sitting quietly by while the school system treated Sarah
and other girls unfairly. For a mother, it was an impossible dilemma: She could fight for
her daughter's rights and subject her to the community's wrath or give up the battle and
let her daughter submit to gender discrimination. Either way, Sarah would suffer.
Sarah secretly wished her mother would postpone her fight until she was out of high
school. Then, one day, something happened to change her mind. Sarah had worn a Tshirt to gym class that said, "Title IX Now." Some classmates, who equated Title IX with
an attack on football, stole the T-shirt from her locker. When Sarah learned that it was a
former close friend of hers who had arranged the scheme, she was shocked and hurt.
Sarah came home in tears. That's it, Fritson decided. It's over. But the T-shirt incident
had stoked Sarah's own determination to change the system. She asked her mother to
keep fighting.
Soon after, Naomi and Sarah discovered they were not alone in their battle. In Omaha,
Nebraska's largest city, two men also had been fighting for female athletes by
supporting girls' softball.
Ron Osborn was a successful men's softball player who had begun coaching women's
softball at local universities to earn extra money and gain access to a gym. He
repeatedly heard parents ask: Why isn't softball offered in high schools, where the girls
might have a chance to win a scholarship?
To his mind, the young women of Nebraska were being prevented from fulfilling their
athletic potential. And he wasn't going to sit back and watch that happen to his
daughter.
So Osborn and Sherm Posca, a child psychiatrist, put together a plan: With the help of
supporters, they would raise money, buy uniforms for players and encourage parents to
run their own teams to show schools that girls were interested in softball. Then they
would ask the schools to sponsor the teams.
89
Almost immediately, 40 private teams had sprung up, including one that came together
around Naomi Fritson's kitchen table. She and Sarah brainstormed a list of possible
players and invited them to try out.
Naomi and her husband, Dean Casper, plunked down several thousand dollars for bats,
balls and mitts. Dean also coached the team, while Fritson shuttled the girls to and from
games. Sarah did her part by joining the newly formed team.
Their decision demanded sacrifices. Sometimes, Dean stood behind home plate
watching other farmers drive by with their harvested crops and felt he should be home
working, too. But he believed that Sarah and other girls should have the same
opportunities boys did. The work would have to wait.
All told, 13 Minden girls joined the team. Under the shadow of a giant grain silo looming
over center field, the girls cracked balls, pulled down high-flies and learned how to pitch.
They ended their first season with a winning record.
Believing they had proven girls' interest in softball, Dean and Naomi asked the school to
sponsor the team. They pointed out that this would balance the number of sports teams
available to boys and girls, which then stood at four to three. But the board rejected the
appeal, saying there were too few area teams for Minden girls to play.
Fritson was nearly at her wits' end. Her campaign had dragged on for three years. The
complaint she had filed with the Office of Civil Rights had not produced the changes she
wanted, and Sarah was about to enter her senior year. The only thing left to do was file
a lawsuit.
The Fritson-Caspers had talked with lawyers before, but no one offered much
encouragement. Then Fritson met Kristen Galles. Formerly a softball player for
Creighton University in Omaha and now a lawyer, Kristen knew the thrill of being a
female athlete. She was also well acquainted with the Title IX law, and she was
confident that Naomi and Sarah could win this case.
So, in April 1995, the Fritson-Caspers and Galles made history, filing one of the first
Title IX lawsuits against any high school in the country. Supporting them in the case
was the National Women's Law Center in Washington, D.C.
The community was outraged. The superintendent denounced the lawsuit's charges.
Parents wrote to the local papers, saying that "the girls just want to be left alone." And
one Minden resident wrote Fritson, "You've had your day in the sun. Now find a rock
and crawl under it."
But no matter what people said, Fritson knew the law was on her side. And justice, she
believed, was just a matter of time. A flurry of lawsuits were being filed around the
country on behalf of girls in high school and college athletic programs.
90
About a year later, recognizing a growing movement toward equity in school sports, the
Minden school district administrators offered a settlement. They promised to start a girls'
softball team, offer equal equipment to girls, provide comparable transportation to and
scheduling of games, hire equally experienced coaches, give the same amount of
publicity to girls' and boys' teams, and pay Fritson $75,000 for attorney fees and
damages.
"Minden felt that it was in the best interests of all concerned that this matter be settled in
order to move the school district forward," Minden school Superintendent Scott Maline
told the press.
Fritson was relieved that her long, difficult struggle was over. She still smiles when she
remembers attending the first Minden High School's girls' softball game. "They lost, but
they didn't care," she recalls. "They played their hearts out."
The family's legal victory didn't end in Minden. Their lawsuit, along with three more their
lawyer filed against other Nebraska schools, put administrators throughout the state on
notice. Fearing similar legal challenges, several dozen Nebraska schools took it upon
themselves to improve their girls' sports programs and add softball.
As it turned out, Sarah Casper never had the opportunity to reap the rewards of their
victory; she had graduated by the time Minden High School made any changes. But she
is satisfied knowing that other young female athletes are benefiting from them now. She
says the experience taught her a lot about what happens when you buck the system.
"I learned how standing up for something you believe in can cause lots of problems, and
how things can get a whole lot worse before they get better," Sarah told a newspaper
reporter. "You see just how much people hate change."
As for Naomi Fritson, she looked through her photo albums after this battle ended and
realized that four years were missing. Since then, she has dedicated herself to catching
up on family life. But she never doubts that she did the right thing.
"Everybody wonders what their function in life is," she says. "For me, I think this was it."
This article is from the Teaching Tolerance curriculum kit A Place at the Table.
91
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Eighth Grade
Unit: 8.1
Standard and Expectation: Reading 8.R1, 8.R.2
Theme: Character Analysis
Duration: 2-3 days
Description: The overall objective of this lesson is to provide opportunity, through the
language arts curriculum, for students to think about what it means to be intelligent and
fast (able to run)/athletic. The lesson is about breaking down stereotypes of
characteristics and behaviors attributed by gender through character analysis.
Duration: 2 days
Purpose: Character Analysis
Objective: Provided a series of activities, the students will recognize gender bias and
stereotyping in school by:
1. Using their reading and listening skills.
2. Reading the story The Necklace by Guy Maupassant to discuss gender.
3. Complete the “Character Traits and Textual Evidence.”
4. Recreating and writing their own characters.
Students will use higher order thinking/reasoning skills, such as comparison/contrast,
induction, deduction, and constructing supporting sentences for their conclusions. This
will be done through teacher questioning and presentations of students.
Procedures:
Initial: Using a few model short stories, the teacher leads the class to identify the
elements of the of the plot and character analysis.
Activities
Story is constructed from the following 6 components
• Characters - Main characters, minor characters, and character development
• Dialogue- Reveals character; advances plot
• Setting - time, place, mood, and atmosphere
• Plot - six basic plots with a central conflict; plot motivation; setbacks
• Point of View - First person, third person
• Beginnings, Transitions, and Endings
Development:
1) Distribute copies of text: The Necklace and highlighters to students.
2) Explain difference between reading for comprehension and reading for analysis.
92
Reading for comprehension
Focus on understanding story
Looking at whole picture
Acting as a reader
Reading for analysis
Focus on investigating writing
Zooming in on tiny pieces
Acting as a scientist or detective
3) Walk the students through the annotating steps below. Before beginning, tell the
students not to worry about being right or wrong; rather, make decisions based on
knowledge and gut instinct.
a) Highlight words associated with wealth and beauty in pink.
b) Highlight words associated with poverty and homeliness in yellow.
4) It is up to the teacher whether or not to stop for discussion and sharing after each
step of the annotation process. Essentially, the activity should follow the following
process:
After giving students a few minutes for highlighting, the instructor should invite students
to share what one thing they have highlighted.
This is an excellent opportunity to gauge understanding, engage the entire class, and
create a low-stress moment for participation by those students who typically don’t share
their work. In some cases the instructor may simply highlight the word and call on the
next student, but in other cases a follow question of “Why did you highlight that word?”
and if it is necessary and needed to further discussion to promote metacognition.
5) Once the shared annotations are marked, the teacher will lead the students in a class
discussion of what those annotations reveal. This is the most crucial step. It is not
enough for students to identify similes; we want to move them forward in understanding
WHY an author uses them – in general and in specific circumstances. Often students
need help finding patterns, but seeing patterns in writing leads to a deeper
understanding of a text.
93
94
Sample Character Traits (From: Read, Write, Think, 2004)
able
demanding
Hopeless
active
dependable
humorous
adventurous
depressed
ignorant
affectionate
determined
imaginative
afraid
discouraged
impatient
alert
dishonest
impolite
ambitious
disrespectful
inconsiderate
angry
doubtful
independent
annoyed
dull
industrious
anxious
dutiful
innocent
apologetic
eager
intelligent
arrogant
easygoing
jealous
attentive
efficient
kindly
average
embarrassed
lazy
bad
encouraging
leader
blue
energetic
lively
bold
evil
lonely
bored
excited
loving
bossy
expert
loyal
brainy
fair
lucky
brave
faithful
mature
bright
fearless
mean
brilliant
fierce
messy
busy
foolish
miserable
calm
fortunate
mysterious
careful
foul
naughty
careless
fresh
nervous
cautious
friendly
nice
charming
frustrated
noisy
cheerful
funny
obedient
childish
gentle
obnoxious
clever
giving
old
clumsy
glamorous
peaceful
coarse
gloomy
picky
concerned
good
pleasant
confident
graceful
polite
confused
grateful
poor
considerate
greedy
popular
cooperative
grouchy
positive
courageous
grumpy
precise
cowardly
guilty
proper
cross
happy
proud
cruel
harsh
quick
curious
hateful
quiet
dangerous
healthy
rational
daring
helpful
reliable
dark
honest
religious
decisive
hopeful
responsible
restless
rich
rough
rowdy
rude
sad
safe
satisfied
scared
secretive
selfish
serious
sharp
short
shy
silly
skillful
sly
smart
sneaky
sorry
spoiled
stingy
strange
strict
stubborn
sweet
talented
tall
thankful
thoughtful
thoughtless
tired
tolerant
touchy
trusting
trustworthy
unfriendly
unhappy
upset
useful
warm
weak
wicked
wise
worried
wrong
young
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CHARACTER TRAITS & TEXTUAL EVIDENCE
FOR __________________________
CHARACTER TRAIT #1:
Quote (pg. ____):
Commentary:
Quote (pg. ____):
Commentary:
CHARACTER TRAIT #2:
Quote (pg. ____):
Commentary:
Quote (pg. ____):
Commentary:
96
Character Analysis
Directions:
1. Complete the “Character Traits and Textual Evidence.”
2. Take your quotes and analysis and formulate it into a well-written paragraph
using the following outline to help you. Don’t forget transition words.
A. Write a sentence containing the first adjective (character trait).
B. Write a sentence using your first quote that supports your first adjective.
C. Incorporate the quote, don’t just copy it.
D. Write a sentence explaining how the quote supports the trait.
E. Repeat steps B and C for the other quote.
F. Write a sentence containing the second adjective (character trait).
G. Write a sentence using your second quote that supports your second
adjective.
H. Incorporate the quote, don’t just copy it.
I. Write a sentence explaining how the quote supports the trait.
J. Repeat steps F and G for the other quote.
K. Revise and edit your paragraph.
L. Turn in!
Changing Characters
Directions:
Rewrite the paragraph and change the sexes of each character (example: if the first
character is a woman change her name to a man’s name or vice versa). Analyze if the
character when changed of sexes make sense yes/no. Why? What will the society think
of these role change? What does the student think of these role changes? Are gender
roles changing today?
Assessment:
Students can be assessed on their participation during the activity, their annotations on
the excerpt, and/or in a follow-up writing activity in which they are asked to explain their
analysis in a paragraph or more.
Closing:
1. The student revises his/her drafts as needed.
2. The student draws pictures on each page, representing the element discussed.
3. The student discusses his/her work with the teacher in a one-on-one conference
in order for the student to demonstrate the ability to use appropriate language to
discuss and analyze the characters in a story.
97
Materials:
Paper
Copies of the excerpted text;
Three different colored highlighters;
Pencil or pen
Overhead projector or document camera
The Necklace pdf
http://photos.state.gov/libraries/hochiminh/646441/vantt/The%20necklace.pdf
Reference
Pankiewicz, Megan (2015)
http://www.hasdk12.org/cms/lib3/PA01001366/Centricity/Domain/1238/Neclace%20intro
%20awesome%20ideas.pdf
98
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Eighth
Unit: 8.2 Memoirs and Transformative Decisions
PRCS: 8.S.3, 8.R.3I, 8.R.3Ia, 8.W.2, 8.W.2, 8.W.4, 8.W.5, 8.W.8
Theme: Evaluating gender roles in fairy tales Asian Cinderella Tales
Duration: 120 min
Description: Expose students to Cinderella stories from Asian cultures as well as to a
memoir of a Chinese woman who experienced a “Cinderella” existence in real life in
China. Expose students to cultural differences but also to make them aware of social
and gender prejudices and bias.
Purpose: To value and illustrate the traditional roles within a new gender perspective.
Objective: After reading various types of genres, the student will use story elements
establishing differences between a fairytale and a memoir.
Procedure:
Initial:
1. Present the Fairy Tale stories by reading them aloud to the class.
Development:
Development:
1. After each story, have students (divided into groups of 4/5) fill out the grid sheet
with the appropriate answers.
2. Have a discussion and feedback from the class, using an overhead to clarify
group answers.
3. Have a discussion as to why there are Cinderella stories and how they might
serve as a “lesson” for a particular society. Have questions and discussion as to
gender roles, values and if these roles are changing? Why?
4. Present the memoir “The Chinese Cinderella: The true story of an unwanted
daughter”. This book may be read out loud or copies given to each student to
read.
5. Students receive the packet, “Teacher Notes” and answer the questions in their
journal entries or on separate paper.
6. Have class discussion of the book and a compare and contrast activity as to the
fairy tales and the true story. Be sure to have students read about Adeline Yen
Mah, before the discussion (see website address).
7. Students will be asked to do one of the following culminating projects:
99
A. Write their own Cinderella story incorporating all of the elements discussed
B. Write a short research paper on women’s roles/history in Japan, China, or
Korea and Puerto Rico.
C. Write a comparative essay on the role of Cinderella verses the role of Mulan in
Chinese literature and society. Have them try to find examples in Chinese history
to back their hypothesis/evaluation.
Closing:
Assessment: Completion of the Cinderella Grid sheets, class discussions, group
cooperation, Teacher Notes question packets completed and final culminating
projects being turned in will be the basis of assessment of unit.
Materials:
Asian Cinderella Grid Sheet
Copies of Books: The Korean Cinderella
Yeh Shen
Lily and the Wooden Bowl
Chinese Cinderella: The True Story of an Unwanted
Daughter
Teacher’s Notes/ Handout: The Chinese Cinderella, Questions and
Discussion
1. Websites:
a. .www.learner.org/channel/workshops/conversations/conversation/objectifying/
extension.html
b. www.surlalunefairytale.com/cinderella/other.html
c. www.adelineyenmah.com
d. www.geocities.com/Hollywood/50821/mulanfaq.html
e. www.chinapage.com/mulan.html
100
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Eighth
Unit: 8.3 Persuasive Letter
PRCS: 8.S.3, 8.R.3I, 8.R.3Ia, 8.W.2, 8.W.2, 8.W.4, 8.W.5, 8.W.8
Theme: Dictating Hairstyles, Constitutional Rights
Duration: 120 min
Description: Teaching the Constitution can sometimes be a bore—for educators and
for students. This lesson posits the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the
Constitution within a framework that’s likely to resonate with students: Can schools
dictate their hairstyles?
Purpose:
Explore the Constitutional Rights first and Fourteenth Amendments
Objective:
In this lesson, the students will:
1. Develop a deeper understanding of freedoms guaranteed by the First and
Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution;
2. Discuss how government interests (the interests of public schools) can
sometimes contradict with those freedoms;
3. Read and interpret informational texts with Purpose, and
4. Share what they’ve learned verbally and in writing elements.
5. Analyze how gender stereotypes impact the rules that are used in schools.
Procedure:
Initial:
Discuss:
1. Does living in a free country mean we should be able to do anything we
want?
2. How should we balance the need for social order against the need to protect
individual liberties?
Development:
1. Find a partner and work together for five minutes to record at least three questions
you have about the following statement: “Schools should be able to prohibit
inappropriate student hairstyles on campus.”
2. Share your questions with the rest of the class. List the questions on the board or on
an overhead. If another pair already has raised one of your questions, place a star by it.
Are there any other questions needing to be added to the list?
3. As you read Can Schools Dictate Your Hair? Handout, look for answers to the
questions on the board, especially ones with one or more stars. Which questions were
answered satisfactorily? Which were not? Why?
101
4. After this brief class discussion, break into four inquiry groups—a freedom of
expression group, a liberty interest group, an equal protection interest group and a due
process group. Each of your inquiry groups has a particular task in examining the news
stories (Parents Upset over New Hair Policy and Kicked Out for Pink Hair):

If you are in the “freedom of expression” group, identify the stories related to
that theme. What claims are students making, if any, about hair policies’ impact
on their ability to express themselves?

If you are in the “liberty interest” group, identify the ways the stories relate to
that theme. What claims are students making, if any, about the ways hair policies
are interfering with their individual freedom?

If you are in the “equal protection interest” group, identify ways the stories
relate to that theme. What claims are students making, if any, about the ways
hair policies may impact individuals and groups differently, i.e., boys and girls,
cultural groups, etc.?

If you are in the “due process” group, identify ways the stories relate to that
theme. What is the compelling government interest in the hair policies? What are
the public schools trying to accomplish with them?
Your group has 30 minutes. Refer back to definitions in the Can Schools Dictate Your
Hair? Handout as necessary. Each member of the group should jot down notes as you
go along.
5. Create new groups of four so that one of you represents the “freedom of expression,”
“liberty interest,” “equal protection interest” and “due process” groups, respectively.
Each member should take about three minutes to share findings from his or her inquiry
group. After each member has had a turn, refer back to the questions listed on the
board. Spend three minutes discussing: Which questions have been answered
satisfactorily? Which have not? Why? (Note: Ask small groups to report back to the
class to briefly share outstanding questions identified in their discussions.)
Closing:
Assessment
individually, write a persuasive letter to the school administration to the following writing
prompt: What steps should schools take to create hair policies that respect the
Constitutional rights of students and support school environments that are focused on
learning? This is an opportunity to demonstrate the knowledge you’ve gained about how
schools should balance students’ individual freedoms with the need to have social order
in schools.
Materials:
Copies of the Can Schools Dictate Your Hair? Handout
Copies of the following news stories or Internet access to
Parents Upset over New Hair Policy and Kicked Out for Pink Hair
The GIST template, from the International Reading Association (optional)
them:
102
Glossary
Freedom of expression [frēdəm əv ik spre sh ən] (noun) Extends from the First
Amendment of the Constitution, which guarantees freedom of speech. Court decisions
have expanded the concept beyond mere verbal communication; protected speech now
includes non-verbal expressions as well, i.e., wearing a symbol on one's clothing.
Liberty interest [libərtē int (ə) rist] (noun). The guarantee that the government will not
deny or interfere with individuals’ freedoms, especially without due process.
Due process [d(y) oō prä ses] (noun) The requirement that laws and regulations must
be related to a legitimate government interest (i.e., crime prevention) and will not
contain provisions that result in the unfair or arbitrary treatment of individuals.
equal
protection
interest
[ēkwəl
prə
tek
sh
ən
int(ə)rist]
(noun) The guarantee that the government will treat an individual or class of individuals
the same as it treats other individuals or classes in like circumstances
http://www.tolerance.org/sites/default/files/general/
103
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Eighth
Unit: 8.4 Personal Essays and Beliefs
PRCS: 8.L.1 8.L.1b 8.S.2 8.S.3 8.S.6 8.W.3 8.W.8
Theme: Evaluating gender roles in fairy tales Asian Cinderella Tales
Duration: 50 min
Description: This activity encourages students to learn about the adults who work in their
school while they gain understanding of gender bias and stereotyping while acquiring
research strategies for writing essays.
Purpose: Using surveys as a tool for research.
Objective: After a class discussion the student will acquire survey strategies for writing an
essay about adults that work in their schools.
Procedures: Initial:
1. Discuss: To prepare for this activity, think about all of the adults your students come
in contact with each day: nurses, custodians, principal, teachers, media specialist,
counselors, etc. Briefly survey each adult on your list. Find out what other
occupations or positions he or she held prior to arriving on your school setting. Be
sure that you can explain all careers identified. (ask students to ask also in their
communities)
Development:
1. With students, write two lists on the board. On the left-hand side, list the adults who
work in your school. Consider including photographs in case students do not know
the adults by name. On the right-hand side, list all the occupations these staff
members held in the past.
2. Instruct students to match the position with the person they think held it. Students
can talk with each other, make predictions and share their assumptions openly.
Allow 10 to 15 minutes of speculation and discussion about which occupation goes
with which adult.
Closing:
1. Reveal the actual matches. Ask students if any of the outcomes surprise them and
why. Listen and discuss gender stereotypes and prejudicial statements. This activity
creates an opportunity to talk about gender stereotypes and how they can limit our
perceptions, identities and interactions.
Materials:
Board
Survey
104
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Eighth
Unit: 8.6
Standard and Expectation:
8.S.1; 8.L.1; 8.L.1b; 8.S.5b; 8.R.6I; 8.W.1a; 8.W.8; 8.LA.2; 8.LA.2b
Activities Theme: Sharing Descriptions and Opinions
Theme: To learn that people have different beliefs and values from one another.
Duration: 2 days
Purpose: To examine stereotypes that students and society hold of what men and
women should be. To learn that people have different beliefs and values from one
another.
Objective: Provides a series of activities the students will Examine stereotypes that
both they and society hold of what men and what women should be. Compare the
dialogue of a male and a female character to identify ways that the dialogue tags (he
said, she wailed, etc.) relate to the stereotypes discussed in class.
Procedure:
Initial: Begin with a sponge activity—an activity at the beginning of class that focuses
students on the upcoming lesson. Like a sponge, it absorbs distractions and allows
students to approach the lesson figuratively "clean." In other words, it's an opening
activity that transitions students to the class. As the sponge activity for this lesson plan,
have students respond to the following question in their journals or on loose leaf: "Being
male/female means…" Have male students respond to the male prompt and the female
students to the female prompt. Ask students to come up with as many responses as
they can.
Development:
1. At one end of the room post a large sign labeled “Agree” and at the other end
post a large sign labeled “Disagree.” In the center of the room, post a sign
labeled “Unsure.”
2. Explain to students that you are going to read several statements, none of which
have a “right” or “wrong” answer. As each statement is read, tell them that they
are to take a position in the room based on whether they agree, disagree, or are
unsure about the accuracy of the statement.
3. Read some or all of the statements below and allow time for students to take a
position following each one. Tell them to observe how people change positions
from one topic to the next.
A. Students should not be required to recite the Pledge of Allegiance in school.
(Does not apply in Puerto Rico.)
B. Public schools should require all students to wear uniforms.
C. Parents should carefully monitor how their children use the internet.
D. Video games make teens violent.
105
E.
F.
G.
H.
I.
J.
K.
L.
M.
N.
O.
P.
Q.
R.
S.
T.
U.
Most young people do not respect adults.
Most adults do not respect teenagers.
Rap music makes teens violent.
Prejudiced people cannot be changed.
Jokes that focus on ethnicity, race, sexual orientation, or gender identity
reinforce prejudice.
The media unfairly portrays certain groups of people.
There is too much focus on diversity and multiculturalism in the school
curriculum.
People whom the government suspects of being dangerous to the United
States should be carefully watched and their activities monitored.
Anyone who wants to go to the United States should be allowed to enter.
Since the World Trade Center and Pentagon terrorist attacks, the world is no
longer safe anywhere.
Bullying is a normal part of adolescent behavior.
School violence is a major problem in this country.
Women should stay at home and men go to work
Men always should pay on a date
Jealousy is normal if you really love someone
Boys don’t cry
Girls should be feminine
4. Ask students to make general observations about the lesson and to explain how
they felt sharing their opinions on some of the topics. Guide a whole-group
discussion using some or all of the following questions:
a. How did it feel to take a position on some of the topics?
b. If there was a particular topic that you were unsure about, what
information would you need in order to form an opinion?
c. How did you feel when you saw others taking a completely different
position from yours on a topic? Were any of your classmates’ opinions
surprising to you? Explain.
d. Was there a statement read where you were clearly in the minority in your
position? Did you consider changing your position to conform to the
majority? Why or why not?
e. What do you think was the Purpose of this lesson?
f. How does the variety of beliefs and opinions that people hold present
challenges when people work and live together? How can different opinions
be beneficial?
g. Do you think people sometimes pretend to agree with another person in
order to avoid conflict?
h. Do you think it likely that people change their opinions on topics like the
ones presented in this lesson? If so, what kinds of things are likely to cause
opinions to change?
Closing:
In small groups have students discuss the lesson. Instruct them to consider the various
ways that people come to hold their beliefs, opinions, and values and make a list on a
106
piece of paper. After all groups have completed the discussion, prepare a composite list
of their responses on chart paper or on the board.
As an additional activity, encourage students to ask their parents or other family
members the same questions and compare those responses to their own.
Materials:
Paper
Three large pieces of construction paper with the following words, written in very large
letters, one on each sheet of paper: “Agree,” “Disagree,” and “Unsure”
Reference
Building
Community
and
Combating
Hate
(2004).
Retrieved
http://www.partnersagainsthate.org/educators/middle_school_lesson_plans.pdf
from:
107
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Ninth Grade
Unit: 9.1 Genres overview, Elements of Fiction
Standard and Expectation:
9. L.1a; 9.L.1b; 9.L.1d; 9.W.4; 9.S.1; 9.S.3
Activities Theme: Elements of Fiction
Theme: The Nervous Plane Pilot Woman
Duration: 2-3 days
Description: Write a fictional narrative short story using the following situation. The
Nervous Plane Pilot Woman: "Check the landing gear! We're about to crash," yelled
the pilot to her copilot as she anxiously adjusted the throttle of the plane.
Purpose: Identify the elements of fiction in the short stories
Objective: After discussing the elements of fiction and the short stories, students will
write a fictional narrative short story using a guideline.
Procedures:
Initial: Using a few model fictional narrative short stories, the teacher leads the class in
identifying the elements of fiction.
Fiction is constructed from the following 6 components
• Characters - Main characters, minor characters, & character development
• Dialogue- Reveals character; advances plot
• Setting - time, place, mood, & atmosphere
• Plot - six basic plots with a central conflict; plot motivation; setbacks
• Point of View - Fist person, third person
• Beginnings, Transitions, and Endings
Development: Teacher will explain all the elements of the short story provided below.
Then, students will work with the worksheet of the Student’s Fictional Narrative Short
Story Guideline to create their own short story based on the situation given.
Characters
The main character is also known as the hero or heroine, or the protagonist.
In stories with good guys and bad guys, the villain, or antagonist, can be a main
character (Ex.: Wolf in Three Little Pigs).
Minor characters are the others in the story who interact with or help the main
characters. They are used to enhance and help reveal the main characters' personae,
often by contrast. Sometimes they are referred to as foils (Ex.: Cinderella's stepsisters).
Writers reveal their characters through five means:
1. What they say
2. What they think (a book's advantage over film or stage)
3. What they do
4. Direct description
5. What the other characters say or think about them
108
Dialogue
Dialogue can:
1. Reveal character traits and show the action
2. Advance the plot.
3. Contain a speaker tag that names the speaker
4. Contain stage directions that help show (not tell) the action
Setting
Setting involves time, place, weather, and surroundings, all helping to create a
specific mood or atmosphere. To reveal these elements, writers depend on
descriptive writing, calling on all the senses to convey an image to the reader. Good
description will involve as many of the 5 senses as possible.
The elements chosen by a writer to reveal the historical time setting may
include:
Manner of speech
Jargon
Slang
Clothing
Vehicles
Money
Tools
Names
Customs
Manners
Food and drink, etc.
Mood, or atmosphere, can be indicated through the author's choice of verbs, as
well as nouns and adjectives. Strong verbs are always best. Weather can also be
used to indicate the atmosphere in a story.
Ex.: The cat went across the lawn. [Weak mood]
The skinny black cat slunk across the dark, rain-soaked lawn.
[Stronger mood]
Plot
There are 6 basic plots for most of all fiction that have been used by all writers
and may be used by beginning writers without fear of plagiarism. These may be used
alone or in combination and form the basis of nearly all story conflicts, for books, plays,
movies, television programs, etc.
1. Lost and Found - Person or object is lost and recovered
Ex.: The Incredible Journey or Home Alone
2. Character vs. Nature - Character survives a natural calamity
Ex.: Jaws or Volcano
3. Character with a personal problem or goal - character solves it and
reaches goal or changes attitude or feelings
Ex.: Freckle Juice or Rudy or Rocky
4. Good Guys vs. Bad Guys - good guys usually win
Ex.: The Three Little Pigs or most westerns
109
5. Crime and Punishment or Mystery and Solution - Character solves a
mystery or crime and the culprit is caught or punished
Ex.: Matlock or Murder She Wrote
6. Boy meets Girl - Problems or misunderstandings arise; Characters
resolve differences or clear up misunderstandings
Ex.: Romeo and Juliet or Snow White or Cinderella
Complications of Plot: Building Suspense
The conflict, goal, problem, or what the main character wants should be set
up in the first sentence, paragraph, page, or chapter, depending upon a story’s length, If
not stated outright, it should at least be hinted at very strongly,
Writers need to create tension in order to keep their readers interested Writers
want their readers to wonder, "What happens next?"
Writers do this in several ways:
1. Time pressure - The character has a limited amount of time in which to
accomplish a goal or solve a problem.
Ex.: Rumpelstiltskin, Hansel and Gretel
Other time pressures include:
Forces of nature - tide coming in. impending storm, etc.
Deadline dates - preparations, contest entry deadlines, athletic training
for a specific contest, mortgage payment, bomb set to
go off, harvest before the rain frost, onset of winter, etc.
Arrival of holiday - birthday of Christmas gifts to make, etc.
2. Setbacks - The most important part of the plot is the series of setbacks the
main character faces in trying to resolve the conflict or attain the goal. In welldeveloped fiction, there are often 3 or more of them. The series of setbacks
make up the middle of the story. The main character overcomes each
successively more difficult setback - the last one in a grand way to a satisfactory
close.
110
Events or setbacks that might temporarily prevent the characters from solving their
problems are:
• injuries
• weather
• losses
• mistakes
• misunderstandings
• mishaps or accidents
3. Reader Is In On a Secret the Character Doesn't Know - Tension rises when the
reader learns something through the narration that the character doesn't know.
The reader becomes anxious for the character.
Ex. The saddle girth is frayed and about to break.
A villain is hiding in the house. A trap has been laid.
4. Anticipation of a Major Scene - Characters set up the tension through their
dialogue about the Big Event or their warnings. They anticipate another
character’s arrival or action(s).
Point of View
Point of view refers to how the author of a story speaks to a reader, through
whose eyes the events are viewed or reported. Beginning writers should concentrate
on one of 2 basic points of view:
1. Third Person Point of View – (most common) The author acts as a narrator.
NOT a character in the story, who knows everything and tells the reader what
the main characters are thinking and doing. The author uses the third-person
pronouns such as he, she, and they, as well as the characters’ names to tell the
story.
2. First Person Point of View- The author tells the story from the main character's
point of view. The author uses the first-person pronouns such as I and me to tell
the story. First person can make a story more believable. To overcome the
problem of having to have the main character present in every scene in order to
relate the events, writers sometimes have minor characters simply tell the main
character about events he or she missed.
Beginnings, Transitions, and Endings
Beginnings
Beginning writers can learn to "hook" their readers in the first sentence. This can
be done with any of the following techniques:
• The author introduces the main character by name.
• The main character, named, is thinking of something.
• The author describes the setting (place).
• The author tells the setting (time).
• The author sets up the conflict in the first sentence.
• The character is talking (dialogue).
• An event is in progress.
• Combinations of any of the above.
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• A letter or note is read.
• A prologue (background information) tells of events from the past that set
up the story
Transitions
Narrative fiction is characterized by the passage of time. A writer helps the
reader follow the story's events, in time and place, by using transitions that show
changes in time, place, characters, or action. Transitions can be one word, a phrase, or
a whole sentence to show these changes clearly for a reader.
See your text for a chart or list of appropriate narrative transition types
Ex.: The following morning . . . or A hundred years passed . . . (shows change of
time)
Meanwhile, back at the ranch . . . (shows change in place)
While Cinderella worked hard to finish all of her chores, her wicked
stepsisters were busy plotting against her. (shows change in
characters)
Endings
The conclusion of a fictional narrative must reveal the end of the conflict and/or the
lesson learned or insight gained by the characters from the experience. If you have
trouble, go back and identify which of the 6 basic plots that you have chosen to use in
your story, and make sure that you have an ending that fits the type.
• End with a universal word.
• End with Finally, Eventually . . .,
The last thing I need is another broken heart.
Eventually, the scar and the pain will fade, and I will go on.
• End with a quotation from one of the characters.
Like my grandma always says, “If life hands you lemons, make
lemonade!”
• End with the main character’s feelings about the event.
I knew then that I had succeeded. I was overjoyed to have finally found
my happily-ever-after.
• End with a prediction or advice.
The next time he came across a strange-looking little man, he walked right
on by.
• End with a summary statement.
No matter how you look at it, laughter is good medicine
Writers who can't seem to find the right ending may need to review the basic plot
types and their corresponding resolutions. They might also try writing several endings
and see which one works best.
Students will develop a short story using the following situation: The Nervous Plane
Pilot Woman: "Check the landing gear! We're about to crash," yelled the pilot to her
copilot as she anxiously adjusted the throttle of the plane.
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Student’s Fictional Narrative Short Story Guideline
Elements
Observations
Characters:
Main Character
Minor Characters
How are they revealed?
Setting
Plot
Complications of Plot:
(The
conflict,
goal,
problem, or what the main
character wants should be
set up).
Setbacks
The most important part
of the plot is the series of
setbacks
the
main
character faces in trying to
resolve the conflict or attain
the goal. In well-developed
fiction, there are often 3 or
more of them. The series
of setbacks make up the
middle of the story. The
main character overcomes
each successively more
difficult setback - the last
one in a grand way to a
satisfactory close.
Point of View
(Point of view refers to how
the author of a story
speaks to a reader,
through whose eyes the
events are viewed or
reported).
1. Third Person Point of
View or
2. First Person Point of
View
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Beginning (The Hook)
Transitions
A writer helps the reader
follow the story's events, in
time and place, by using
transitions
that
show
changes in time, place,
characters,
or
action.
Transitions can be one
word, a phrase, or a whole
sentence to show these
changes clearly for a
reader.
Ending
The conclusion of a fictional
narrative must reveal the
end of the conflict and/or
the lesson learned or
insight gained by the
characters
from
the
experience.
Closing:
1. The student revises drafts as needed.
2. The student draws pictures on each page, representing the element discussed.
3. The student discusses his/her work with the teacher in a one-on-one conference
in order for the student to demonstrate the ability to use appropriate language to
discuss and analyze the elements of short stories.
4. The students analyze what stereotypes were used in the story and why.
5. The student proposes a new approach to the story avoiding the use of gender
stereotypes.
Materials:
Paper
Construction Paper
Crayons
Glue
Scissors
Sheet of Story Elements
Student’s Fictional Narrative Short Story Guideline
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Ninth
Unit: 9.2 Communicating My Ideas
Standard and Expectation:
9.L.1; 9.L.1a; 9.L.1c; 9.L.1d; 9.S.1; 9.S.2; 9.S.2b; 9.S.3; 9.S.5; 9.R.1; 9.W.1; 9.W.8;
9.LA.2; 9.LA.6
Activities Theme: Features of Personal Narrative and Memoir
Personal Narrative on: The Other SEX is...Opinions and Feelings Concerning the
"Opposite" Sex
Duration: 2-3 days
SUBJECTS: English, Health, Life Skills
Theme: My Opinion on the Other Sex
Description: This is a student writing-based activity that explores preconceptions,
attitudes, and anxieties concerning the "opposite" gender. Discussion is stimulated by
student reading of personal narratives.
Purpose: Identify the elements of personal narrative and explores preconceptions,
attitudes, and anxieties concerning the "opposite” sex.
Objectives: After discussing their feelings and opinion about the opposite sex the
students will write a three paragraph essay and present verbally to the class.:
Long Term
To develop healthy, equitable, and realistic attitudes toward the other sex.
Procedure:
Initial: Ask students to discuss in writing their feelings and opinions about the "opposite”
sex. Give a required length to insure some thought and uniformity for reading time when
used as a classroom activity. Example: 150 words. Students may want to consider the
following questions in their essays:
 In what ways are you different from other students in your class?
 How are you the same as other students in your class?
 Is friendship with the other sex different from same sex friendship? How and
why?
 Do you change your actions and activities when you’re in the presence of the
other sex? How and why?
 Is there
Development: Students will begin to work with the worksheet of the guidelines given.
Separate students according to gender for presentation of essays. Each student reads
his/her paper to the class.
Have listeners respond in two ways:
A. Write a short response to the reader.
Remember: Beginnings, Transitions, and Endings Beginnings
Beginning writers can learn to "hook" their readers in the first sentence.
Transitions can be one word, a phrase, or a whole sentence to show these changes
clearly for a reader.
B. Offer verbal responses. Ask students to find points they agree with. Explain that
responses and viewpoints need to be kept positive.
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 Bring class back together. Have students volunteer to read their essays.
 Allow free discussion. Ask students to consider the following: Was the
discussion different with the whole class present? Why or why not?
Closing:
At the end of the discussion, ask students for positive statements about the other
gender and record them on the board under male or female headings. Point out
commonalities. Ask students to list the statements that could be switched to other
gender column.
EVALUATION:
 Student writing may be assessed in terms of effort, creativity, content, and style.
 Speaking and listening skills may be noted during oral presentations and
subsequent discussions.
Materials:
Use student’s writing exercise as material for this activity.
Paper
Notebooks
Sheet of Story Elements
Computer
Projector for Presentations
Reference:
Don’t Flounder Get Off the Hook: Consider the Non-traditional Occupations (Gender
Equity Activity Booklet) (n.d.). Retrieved from:
http://www.eed.state.ak.us/tls/cte/docs/nto/gender_equity.pdf
116
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Ninth
Unit: 9.3 Communicating About Our World Through Informational Text
Standard and Expectation:
9.S.2a; 9.S.3; 9.R.1; 9.R.4I; 9.W.8; 9.LA.3; 9.LA.4; 9.LA.4a; 9.LA.4c
Activities Theme: What Differences Does a Word Make? Analyzing Gender and Race
Language Bias
Theme: Determining Word Meanings from Context Clues to Analyze Gender and
Race Language Bias
Subjects: Career Awareness, English, Health, Life Skills
Description: This is a fun and creative activity that gives students the job of
“CREATOR OF NEW WORDS." In this activity, students will identify language that is
gender or race biased. Then they will work to create language that is bias free.
Purpose: Identify language that is gender or race biased and create bias free words.
Objective: Provided a short reading selection the student will identify gender.
Procedure:
Initial: Cover the bottom of the “Gender Language” worksheet. This will make
students to come up with their own examples.
Hand out "Gender Language" worksheet to the students and read it aloud. Ask, who
agrees and who disagrees with the information provided? Why?
Development: Students will begin to work with the worksheet of the guidelines given.
1. Considering gender and race have students meet in pairs and list as many
"language mistakes" as they can.
2. After the lists are created, have students think of ways to change the words to
make them gender/race fair and neutral. Have groups make their own unbiased
vocabulary flash cards.
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GENDER LANGUAGE
What difference does a name make?
Throughout the years, jobs have been identified by titles that cause us to think in
tenders of different genders. For many years certain jobs were only performed by one
gender, but as times have changed and more women enter the work force jobs once
reserved for certain genders have changed. Men’s jobs such as policeman, fireman, or
fisherman were once male jobs, and women’s jobs such as housewife, nurse, and
teacher were recognized as female jobs.
As the times have changed, many women and men have entered jobs that were
once gender specific. Now we hear job titles such as flight attendant, fisherperson and
homemaker. Language has had to change to reflect the change of the workforce.
We still have words to describe careers and jobs that we have found hard to
change. On job sites we still use foreman to describe the person in charge of the
worksite. When we think of the history of construction sites we remember that at one
time only men were employed as construction workers. In hospitals when a nurse is
called into a room, we are surprised when it is a male that walks into the room. To this
day some occupations are still thought to be gender specific even though males and
females alike have crossed the career boundaries for many years.
Although these gender-biased labels reflect our past more accurately than the
present, they are still used. Some will try and tell us that some titles are “inclusive” and
can be used for both men and women. This is not true. What would happen if a group of
males were referred to as "you gals?" Yet females are called "you guys" all the time.
As careers change and more men and women cross over the gender line to work
in these jobs, we need to consider the words used to describe new occupations. We
need to reinforce positive gender recognition in the workplace, both in traditional and
non-traditional jobs.
Here are some words and job titles. Can you think of ways you would change these
titles to make them more gender fair or neutral?
foreman
repairman
fisherman
congressman
manpower
housewife
weatherman
mailman
policeman
sportsmanship
anchorman
man made
meter maid
cleaning lady
men working
journeyman
freshman
manhole
landlord
tomboy
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GENDER LANGUAGE
WORDS AND PHRASES DEAR SIR:
"YOU GUYS"
BACHELOR'S DEGREE
ILLEGITIMATE CHILD
STEWARDESS
WHITE LIE
MANMADE
WOMAN’S INTUITION
LAYMAN
HEROINE
TOMBOY
POLICEMAN
DRAFTSMAN
MANHOLE
OLD WIVES' TALE
HOUSEWIFE
SUFFRAGETTE
CONGRESSMAN
MANKIND
LANDLORD
CHAIRMAN
BLACK LIE
SPORTSMANSHIP
LADY LUCK
CLEANING LADY
MAN AND WIFE
FRESHMAN
WORKMAN'S
COMPENSATION
WAITRESS
MACHO
MALE NURSE
LEGAL ALIEN
MINORITY
Closing:
1. Have each group share their flash cards. See how many groups came up with
different and/or the same names. Talk about the difference fair language makes
in our judgments of others.
2. Use the Teacher Language Cards and ask students if they know the
connotations behind each term. Ask students if they can come up with ideas of
where the term originated and how it has changed today.
3. Evaluate students' class participation, small group lists and behavior during group
work.
Materials:
Paper
"Gender Language" worksheet
Make language cards using the attached list of words and phrases. (3”X5” index cards
are best.)
 Note cards and markers.
Reference:
Don’t Flounder Get Off the Hook: Consider the Non-traditional Occupations (Gender
Equity
Activity
Booklet)
(n.d.).
Retrieved
from:
http://www.eed.state.ak.us/tls/cte/docs/nto/gender_equity.pdf
119
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Ninth
Unit: 9.4 It’s a Matter of Opinion
Standard and Expectation:
9.L.1; 9.L.1a; 9.L.1b; 9.W.1; 9.W.1a; 9.W.7; 9.W.8; 9.LA.1; 9.LA.2; 9.LA.2b
Activities Theme: Men’s Work or Women’s Work? Identifying and Analyzing Traditional
Gender Roles in the Workplace
Theme: Evaluating the Effectiveness of Persuasive Styles
Subjects: Career Awareness, English, Math, Health, Life Skills
Duration: 2-3 days
Description: Using the Occupation Checklist at the end of this activity, students will
match jobs and careers to gender to write an essay to persuade others to avoid gender
stereotyping in the workplace. The desired outcome from this activity will be, the
discovery and discussion of persistent gender stereotyping, with its wage and status
implications, in terms of career opportunities.
Purpose: Persuade others to avoid gender stereotyping in the workplace
Objective: Through class discussion the student will use occupation and career
readiness vocabulary without difficulty.
Procedure:
Initial:
1. Introduction: Defining the occupations.
 Hand out copies of “Occupation Checklist” to individual students.
 Read off the listed occupations.
 Describe any jobs that students might not be familiar with.
2. Have students fill out checklist, matching jobs and careers to ‘Male’, ‘Female’, or
‘Both’ by circling the correct response.
3. Using transparencies and an overhead projector or Infocus Projector (if not
available use a large chart) poll the students on each occupation and write the
result on the master checklist.
There are many approaches to conducting the following class survey in a
meaningful way.
 Poll students on how and why they answered the way they did.
 Have students conduct research of the occupations. You may want to divide
the class and assign each group several occupations.
 Another method would be to find out the areas of controversy, assign groups
to research those areas.
Development:
The class, with the teacher’s help, answers the following questions. Ask for a student
volunteer who will plot the results of the questions on the board.
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 Which group “male” or “female” had the largest number?
 Which jobs require working with people? Which group had the larger number?
 Which jobs have the most “status,” and, of those, how many are designated
“males” and how many “females?”
 Which jobs offer the most salary potential, and, of those, how many are
designated “males” and how many “females?” This will require research to
complete.
 Which jobs require the most/least amount of education, and, of those, how many
are designated "males" and how many “females?” Will also require research.
Class should discuss any issues concerning gender as they arise.
The focus should always be steered to "WHY?" Why some jobs are traditionally gender
designated? Why is there an inequity of wage and status along gender lines? The
students should also use this information to write a persuasive essay on gender
equity in workforce.
Closing:
Assess students' completion of checklist; assess involvement in survey, group
discussion and other assigned work.
Using this information, students will write a persuasive essay on gender equity in
workforce. Teacher will use a rubric to evaluate the essay.
RELATED ACTIVITIES:
1. For a math connection, have students create graphs of a variety of occupations
to show percentage of male and female employees, wages for each gender,
highest level of education for each gender, etc.
2. A research component has been touched on for this activity. While requiring
more time and effort, researching specific occupations in terms of opportunity,
availability, skills required, etc., would be a valuable and eye opening experience
for the students.
3. After research has been completed, have student’s choose one occupation to
write a short research paper about.
Materials:
Paper
Occupation checklist
Overhead projector if available
Library and Internet resources
Computer and projector
Reference:
Don’t Flounder Get Off the Hook: Consider the Non-traditional Occupations (Gender
Equity
Activity
Booklet)
(n.d.).
Retrieved
from:
http://www.eed.state.ak.us/tls/cte/docs/nto/gender_equity.pdf
121
FEMALE/MALE
OCCUPATION CHECKLIST
Check whether you believe it is a male's occupation, female's occupation, or both.
JOB
Construction Worker
Flight Attendant
Social Worker
Secretary
Elementary Teacher
Hair Stylist
Model
Store Clerk
Veterinarian
Physical Education Teacher
Cook
Photographer
Nurse
Computer Analyst
Machinist
Dental Assistant
Artist
News Reporter
Telephone Operator
NASA Technician
CAD Specialist
Pharmacist
Baby-sitter
Newspaper Editor
Cashier
Mechanical Engineer
FBI Investigator
Plumber
Librarian
Bank Teller
Dietitian
Licensed Practical Nurse
Security Guard
Day Care Worker
Police Officer
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Gender
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
122
FEMALE/MALE
OCCUPATION CHECKLIST (Cont.)
JOB
Bookkeeper
Graphic Artist
Technical Writer
Lawyer
Gardener
Radio Announcer
Forest Ranger
Physical Therapist
Occupational Therapist
Speech Therapist
Homemaker
Accountant
Musician
English Teacher
Auto Body Instructor
Dairy Farmer
Auto Mechanic
Factory Worker
Gas Station Attendant
Pilot
Professional Athlete
Computer Programmer
Truck Driver
Landscaper
Bartender
Clothing Designer
Carpenter
Physician
Architect
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Male
Gender
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Female
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
Both
123
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Ninth
Unit: 9.5 Making Connections
Standard and Expectation:
9. L.1 9.L.1a 9.L.1b 9.R.1 9.R.1a 9.R.2I 9.R.6I 9.R.8 9.R.10 9.W.1 9.W.1a 9.W.7 9.W.8
9.LA.1 9.LA.2 9.LA.2b
Activities Theme: The Types of Characters & How to characterize them
Theme: Developing Critical and Analytical Thinking about Literary Characters
Subjects: Career Awareness, English, Health, Life Skills
Duration: 2-3 days
Description: The student will define characterization, the types of characters and avoid
stereotypes in gender.
Purpose: Persuade others to avoid gender stereotyping in the workplace.
Objective: After class discussion the student will define characterization and
stereotypes in gender characterization, types of characters and avoid stereotyping
adequately. In this lesson, students identify stereotypical images of girls and women as
represented by female action heroes. After viewing an excerpt from children’s television
programs that feature male or female action heroine, students deconstruct the traits of
the main characters and compare the female action heroes to their male counterparts.
Students discuss the Purpose of television stereotypes, and whether these gender
stereotypes influence the attitudes or behavior of boys or girls. In small groups, students
then assume the role of television producers who wish to create a television series
about male or female super heroine free of gender and other stereotypes.
Procedures:
Note: The heroine of this lesson is for students to articulate what qualities they enjoy or
admire in a female action hero, and why. The teacher should point out that it's not “bad”
to enjoy such attributes — but that it's important for students to be aware of the ways in
which girls and women are (or are not) portrayed.
Initial:
The class will begin with introducing characterization and the five types of characters.
The class will talk about books they have previously read in other English classes and
think about the characters and what type of character they are.
Explain to students that although cartoons featuring male action heroes have been a
staple of children’s television for over fifty years, the idea of female action heroes is
fairly new: it’s only recently that they’ve achieved any presence on children’s TV. As a
result, this lesson will focus primarily on the images of girls and women appearing in
these programs.
1) Give notes on the board with definitions of the six terms.
124
2) pass out hand-out #1 (matching hand-out).
 The students will be broken into groups and assigned a character from the story.
(A story we are presently reading in class). They will characterize their character,
write a paragraph supporting their ideas, and share with the class.
Development:
Guided Discussion
 Divide your blackboard into two sections, headed “Male Action Heroes”
and “Female Action Heroes.”
 Ask students to think of television programs that feature action heroes,
and list them under the appropriate heading.
Have students analyze why they enjoy watching these programs, and get them to
pinpoint the characteristics that make male and female protagonists into true action
heroes/heroines. List these qualities under the appropriate column heading.
Look at the two headings, and decide:
 What are the similarities between male and female superheroes?
 What are the differences?
Show a short clip of a television program that features a female super heroine such as,
Wonder woman, Cat woman or Electra. Before viewing the clip, ask the students to note
down the characteristics that are associated with the girls and women appearing in the
program, as well as those of any boys and men. What are some points they might be
concerned about? Make sure that they consider aspects such as appearance, behavior
and attitudes.
After the clip, list the students’ findings and discuss the characteristics they noted. Ask:
 Did you find that the characteristics of boys and men, and of girls and women,
were stereotypical?
 Which of these characteristics might be limiting? How?
 Which of these characteristics might be positive? How?
 Do any of these characteristics accurately reflect the qualities of real girls and
boys?
 What might happen if most children’s programs portrayed boys and girls in a
stereotypical manner?
 Do the toy action figures of these superheroes counter these stereotypes, or
reinforce them?
 If students have younger siblings who play with television action figures, do they
create their own stories or stick with the plot lines of the program?
Activity
Divide the class into small groups with each group assuming the role of television
producers who have been asked to create a new superhero cartoon series for
students. These producers want the program to be entertaining, and also to be
non-stereotypical: it should provide good role models for young viewers. Tell the
students to be creative!
Make a list of the various positive characteristics your female or male action hero
should have. Some examples might be: girls and women leading others, fighting
for important causes, showing bravery, caring about their female friends, and
being interested in matters other attracting the attention of boys or men.
Examples of positive characteristics for boys and men might be taking care of
125
others, finding ways of solving problems other than fighting, and being sensitive
and caring.
Every heroine or hero needs a trusty sidekick. What might her/his nonstereotypical traits be?
Draw pictures of your female/male action hero and her/his friends. Remember to
incorporate characteristics that challenge conventional stereotypes.
Create a storyboard for an episode of the new TV program. What happens in it?
What action elements are different from a conventional show?
Have each group present its work to the rest of the class.
1) Ask if there are any questions
2) Walk around the classroom during group work to see if any groups have questions
3) Comment on what the students found when they present their character
4) Before class is over, once again go over the definitions with the students.
Closing:
The students will be redirected to the goals on the board, as well as the six definitions.
This will be the student’s final chance to ask any questions they might have.
The students will understand the lesson if they can successfully characterize the
characters in the group assignment. The following day the student will pass in his/her
homework, which also demonstrates their understanding. At the end if the students are
asking a lot of questions, it will be clear that the lesson was not successful.
Extension Activity:
 Distribute the handout From Sailor Moon to The Legend of Korra
 Have students read the essay, and then complete the accompanying questions.
Materials:
Paper
Hand-outs: 1) In class- Matching sheet. There will be a list of terms on the right that the
student will have to match with a list of definitions on the left hand side.
For the extension activity, or to use as a teaching backgrounder, photocopy the student
handout From Sailor Moon to The Legend of Korra
For more information about television stereotypes, photocopy the Stereotypes teaching
backgrounder
Locate a short clip of a TV program featuring a female superhero
Reference:
http://unicef.org
Adapted by Media Smarts, from “Gender Issues in Sailor Moon,” by Alice Te of the
Toronto Board of Education. http://mediasmarts.ca/sites/mediasmarts/files/pdfs/lessonplan/Lesson_Female_Action_Heroes.pdf
From Sailor Moon to the Legend of Korra: Female Action Heroes
The study of gender, action heroes and cartoons offers tremendous opportunities to
reflect on cultural gender stereotypes, and what it means to be male or female in today's
society. As we explore and compare cartoons, we can deconstruct media messages
about gender stereotypes that perpetuate traditional male and female roles — and
contemplate alternatives to them.
126
Before Sailor Moon hit North American airwaves in 1995, there were few female heroes
in Saturday morning cartoons. At that time, in TV shows designed specifically for kids,
only 23 percent of the characters – and even fewer of the major characters – were
female. "In cartoon land, all the girls are sidekicks and there's no doubt who's in
charge," said ABC news anchor Carole Simpson. And they were stereotyped, too: the
lone Smurfette was blond and all too caring; Scooby Doo's Velma was smart but
unattractive; and a female Power Ranger was, of course, dressed in pink. (Source:
Doherty, Shawn and Nadine Joseph. “From Sidekick to Superwoman: TV’s Feminine
Mystique.”)
The study of gender, action heroes and cartoons offers tremendous opportunities to
reflect on cultural gender stereotypes, and what it means to be male or female in today's
society. As we explore and compare cartoons, we can deconstruct media messages
about gender stereotypes that perpetuate traditional male and female roles — and
contemplate alternatives to them.
Because producers of children’s television believe that girls are less likely to watch TV,
and more likely to listen to CDs, tapes or the radio, they have traditionally catered to
young boys. But the popularity with young girls of the Sailor Moon cartoon series made
those producers realize that there was an untapped market of young females that would
watch TV – if they had the right program to attract them.
Sailor Moon’s appeal to young girls was not just the fact that she and her fellow “sailors”
were female, but also the style of storytelling inherent in the Japanese tradition of
anime. Unlike traditional North American cartoon characters, Sailor Moon’s character
evolved as the series progressed, rather than remaining static.
As with a soap opera or a mini-series, each character develops personality and maturity
as the series continues. For example, Sailor Moon goes from being a frightened teen in
the show's initial episode, "to developing into a more mature and caring heroine in later
shows. She essentially 'grows up' on the screen each day, until eventually she becomes
a queen and a mother." (Source: Gauntlett, Dr. David. "Gender and Sexuality in
Japanese Anime." www.theory.org.uk/ctr-rol4.htm)
With the success of Sailor Moon and other anime cartoons in North America, there has
been an increase in female action heroes in children's cartoons. However, increased
representation doesn't always guarantee a decrease in gender stereotypes.
For example, although Sailor Moon achieves maturity and has tremendous powers,
most of her young viewers still relate to her as a giddy love-starved girl with
superpowers.
Many popular series from the last decade, such as Kim Possible and Atomic Betty, have
female leads who take care of villains while retaining "girly" interests like makeup and
cheerleading. The tension between their "masculine" role as heroes and the perceived
need to keep them sufficiently feminine is stretched to the limit in the series Totally
Spies! Where the title characters' gadgets are disguised as hairdryers, compact mirrors
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and other stereotypically girly accessories. Even the Disney movie Mulan, which was
based on a young girl’s quest to break out of rigid social gender expectations, was
undercut by the marketing of its lead character in stereotypically feminine "princess"
clothing.
More recently, though, some TV shows and movies aimed at young people have
featured female leads whose heroism does not have to be "balanced". The most
successful new kids' show of 2012 was The Legend of Korra, featuring a lead character
whose appearance is based more on by female snowboarders and Mixed Martial Arts
stars than on models or cheerleaders. As Brian Konietzko, one of the show's creators,
puts it, "She's muscular, and we like that."
Perhaps the biggest difference between The Legend of Korra and shows such as Sailor
Moon or Totally Spies! Is that Korra is not aimed primarily at a female audience. It's a
popular belief in the TV business that boys won't watch a series with a female lead, and
making Korra the star of the show met with some resistance at Nickelodeon, the
channel that produces the series. Michael DiMartino, the show's other co-creator, said
that executives were swayed by the success of movies such as Brave and The Hunger
Games, which both feature female leads who make few concessions to femininity: "The
time is right in the cultural zeitgeist for all these female heroes to come out." In fact,
nearly two-thirds of the show's viewers are male -- which proves that boys are happy to
watch shows with female leads, so long as they kick butt. (Sources: Ulaby, Neda.
"Airbender Creators Reclaim Their World in Korra" All Things Considered, April 13
2012; Farley, Christopher John. "The Next Airbender Gets Older, Wiser and Adds a
Feminine Touch." The Wall Street Journal, April 8 2012.)
From Sailor Moon to the Legend of Korra: Female Action Heroes Discussion
Questions:
1. According to the article, why have television producers traditionally been
reluctant to create children’s programs that feature girls or women as
superheroes? Do you think that they’re right? Why or why not?
2. Stereotypes are common story-telling tools, but they can also be limiting. How
can male and female stereotypes be limiting in terms of how the characters are
described, what characters are able to do, and the stories that can be told?
3. How was Sailor Moon different from traditional North American cartoons? In what
ways was she a non- stereotypical action hero, and in what ways was she a
stereotypical female action hero?
4. According to the article, Korra is an example of a female action hero who does
not have very many stereotypically female characteristics. Can you think of any
male action heroes who have few or no male characteristics? Do you think such
a character would be successful? Why or why not?
5. In a short paragraph, respond to the following statement:
“Television clearly makes an impression on kids today, whether it’s in what they
think they should look like, or the qualities they associate with women and men.
The media are powerful tools that can either reinforce negative stereotypes or
present strong role models for young girls and boys today.”
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Tenth Grade
Unit: 10.1 Conflict
Standard and Expectation:
10.R. 1a; 10.R.10 10.L.1a; 10.L.1b; 10.L.1d; 10.R.3L; 10.R.5L; 10.S.1; 10.S.2b; 10.W.8
Activities Theme: The Types of Conflicts
Theme: Developing Critical and Analytical Thinking about Types of Conflicts to
Solve Gender Discrimination for Equity
Subjects: English, Spanish, Social Studies
Duration: 2 days
Description: Students work in groups to look for ways to help reduce feelings of
discrimination in others. As an extension, students examine the attitudes that lead some
people to persevere in the face of discrimination and impact the course of history for the
common good. The Purpose is to help ourselves and others solve conflicts.
Purpose: Students define discrimination and compare it to the experience of being a
stranger in a new setting to help solve conflicts.
Objective: Given a series of activities the student will:
 identify a time when he/she felt like a stranger and reflect on those feelings.
 define discrimination and articulate the similarity between feeling like a stranger
and feeling discrimination.
 identify and discuss ways to reduce or eliminate discrimination in the classroom,
school, and community in order to solve conflicts with the teacher’s guidance.
Extensions:
 Students research the life of Vivien Thomas and Hamilton Naki and create and
share a storyboard.
 Compare how Vivien Thomas and Hamilton Naki responded to the discrimination
they encountered in the field of medicine.
 Students conduct research and contribute to a wall display of people that have
overcome discrimination and become philanthropists.
Procedure:
Initial:
Write the word stranger on the display board. Ask the students if they can think of a time
when they felt like a stranger, perhaps in an unfamiliar setting: a new class, a new
school, a new team, or a new neighborhood. Ask them to share their thoughts and
feelings, including their fears and their concerns. Ask them to recall how it turned out.
Were their fears and concerns legitimate, or did they melt into something less over
time? Give the learners 3-5 minutes to jot down responses to the prompts offered in
Attachment One: Personal Experience. Tell them they are not to sign their name
because you will be collecting them and reading some of them anonymously to the
class.
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Courage to Be You (10th Grade)
Handout
Personal Experience
Name:
1. A time when I felt like a "stranger" was when:
2. Some of my fears and/or concerns at the time were:
3. Many, if not all, of the fears and/or concerns that I felt at first ended when:
4. What type of conflict did it cause you?
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Development:
 As the class is writing their responses to the prompts, write the word
discrimination on the display board next to the word stranger.
 After 3-5 minutes, collect the Attachment on: Personal Experience papers from
each learner. Ask the class to define what the term discrimination means to them.
Definition: "the unfair treatment of one person or group, usually because of
prejudice about race, ethnicity, age, religion, or gender" (Encarta Dictionary).
 Arrange the learners into groups of two or three and have them briefly
discuss similarities and differences between the concepts of
discrimination and stranger.
(Teacher Note: While the groups are discussing these questions, look through the
Personal Experience papers and select four or five that provide good examples.)
 After the learners have had sufficient time to discuss, have them share
their thoughts. Record the essence of their discussions on the display
board.
 Read aloud some of the responses to the firsts two prompts on
Attachment on: Personal Experience. Ask the students to listen for the
fears and concerns that arise when someone feels like a stranger.
 Brainstorm with the class examples of discrimination from history. List
these on the display board.
 Read a number of student responses to prompt three of the Personal
Experience attachment. Tell the learners to listen closely to what
reduces fears and concerns. Ask them to identify what they know or
have heard that can be helpful in reducing or eliminating feelings of
discrimination or being a stranger.
 What type of conflict did it cause them to face?
 Are there laws against discrimination? What do they establish?
Students will read the following selection and answer and discuss the questions that
follow.
Read: Carlos and Sophie lived in the same neighborhood. They started out as friends,
but now they fight more than get along. Sophie was quiet and did not like to get into
arguments; she thought they should stop being friends. Carlos liked to tell his point of
view, and did not mind getting angry and then making up; he wanted them to remain
friends. Feeling frustrated about not getting along, Carlos started to gossip about
Sophie to her school friends. She felt very hurt and sad, but she didn’t say anything to
Carlos. Sophie started getting stomachaches and worried that her school friends would
start believing Carlos and stop being her friend.
Discuss: Sometimes it seems like friends can speak different languages. They say one
thing, but the friend hears it a different way. How can Sophie and Carlos show kindness
and respect for each other? How could Sophie’s friends respond with kindness and
fairness to the situation? Why is it important to speak directly to a friend you have an
issue with rather than being silent or talking to other friends? Now, put yourself into
Sophie’s place as a woman, how do you believe that this conflict should be solved?
Why?
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Closing:
 Return
to the small groups and have each group identify one strategy they
can use to reduce or eliminate discrimination and or feelings of being a
stranger in their own classroom, school, or neighborhood.
 Write the word Discrimination in the middle of the large piece of paper.
Ask each group to write words or phrases on the poster that express a
way to reduce or eliminate discrimination in their classroom, school,
and community. Display this mural in the school for all to see.
Assessment:
The assessment for this lesson centers on the learner's group participation and depth of
reflection evident in their responses in the class discussion and poster.
Materials:
Paper
Learner copies of Attachment One: Personal Experience
Large piece of paper (approximately 3' x 3') and markers.
Learner copies of the Attachment Two: Questions of Courage
Handout Personal Experience
Reference:
Learning to Give Organization (n.d.). Courage to Be You. Retrieved from:
http://learningtogive.org/lessons/unit466/lesson1.html
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Tenth
Unit: 10.2 Relationships
Standard and Expectation:
10.R. 1a; 10.R.10 10.L.1a; 10.L.1b; 10.L.1d; 10.R.3L; 10.R.5L; 10.S.1; 10.S.2b; 10.W.8
Activities Theme: Writing Persuasive Essays
Theme: Can a boy and girl be best friends forever?
Subjects: English, Spanish, Social Studies
Duration: 2-3 days
Description: Students write effective persuasive essays about what friendship really is
and if a boy and a girl be best friends forever.
Purpose: Students will write a persuasive essay. Students will identify the meanings of:
hook, thesis statement: position, reasons.
Objective: After discussing the elements in persuasive essays students will use them in
creating an effective introductory paragraph.
Procedure:
Initial:
1. Teacher will begin a discussion on cultural stereotypes about a girl and a boy
being best friends.
2. Ask students to take out their notebooks to write an outline.
3. Write the thesis statement on the following topic: can a boy and girl be best
friends forever? Let students know that they will be focusing on writing an
effective thesis statement and introduction today.
Development:
Project on board: How to write an effective thesis statement and elements of effective
introductions
1. Project: key elements: a) “Hook”: Grab's your readers attention and provides
background information on your topic b) Clear Statement of your thesis: Main
idea/position.
2. Go over what some hooks can look like
3. Go over what a statement is: Your topic plus your position.
Example 1: Project on board (Model: show the students what the hook is, what the
background info is and what the statement is and an example of a thesis statement.)
1. Ask the students to write their own introductory paragraph for a persuasive essay
on the following topic: Can a boy and girl be best friends forever?
2. Remind students to keep in mind the key elements that were learned.
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Closing:
Closing for Understanding:
1. Ask students what is (position, fact, opinion) and have them shout out the answer.
2. Ask the students to shout out one important fact that supports their position.
3. Collect the students’ introductory paragraphs.
4. Analyze how gender stereotypes are present in the essays and whether they
influenced their answers.
Assessment:
Check the intro paragraphs for effective elements taught in the lesson.
Materials:
Paper
Projector, Info includes: 1) Key Elements in an Introduction 2) Hooks (Grabs Attention
and Provides Background) and Statement (Topic + Position) 3) Examples of Effective
Introductions.
Reference:
Dehan
(2012).
Creative
Paper.
Retrieved
from:
http://www.teachnology.com/lessons/lsn_pln_view_lessons.php?action=view&cat_id=4&lsn_id=15280
134
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Tenth
Unit: 10.3 Choices
PRCS: 10.L.1 10.L.1b 10.L.1d 10.LA.1 10.LA.2b 10.LA.2c 10.R.1 10.R.10 10.R.3L
10.S.2 10.S.2c 10.W.3 10.W.7 10.W.8
Theme: Choices
Duration: 120 min
Description: Exploring narratives and gender perspective. Discussing how uniqueness
is perceived as weird.
Purpose: To illustrate how one individual in a homogeneous community can challenge
group members’ perceptions of the norms of the entire community.
Objectives: After reading the story the student will write a narrative based on topics
discussed effectively.
Procedure:
Initial:
1. The teacher chooses a personal narrative novel with a strong theme of
choices made by the main and other characters as a read-aloud in class (see
Literature Connections below for other suggestions).
Development:
1. The student completes attachment 10.1 Learning Activity – Story Map
2. Answer the questions for comprehension.
3. Activity – Editing Marks, if needed as well as 10.3 Performance Task –
Personal Narrative Revising). The teacher evaluates the finished composition
on how well the student incorporates the elements of the narrative genre and
appropriate grammar into his/her paper.
4. Write about an experience(s) where your opinion of someone you viewed as
“weird” or “strange” was challenged. Why did you think this? What made you
change your mind?
5. Is it better to conform to the group or seek to be different or unique? Explain
your answer using specific examples to support your point of view.
6. This selection comes from Jerry Spinelli’s novel Stargirl. The selection
describes how the students at Mica Area High School in Arizona react to
Stargirl, a new student who is very different from them. The narrator is Leo, a
student at the school. Hillari Kimble is a popular girl at the high school. Read
the selection and then answer the questions that follow.
135
Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli
1. Mica Area High School—MAHS—was not exactly a hotbed of nonconformity. There
were individual variants here and there, of course, but within pretty narrow limits we
all wore the same clothes, talked the same way, ate the same food, listened to the
same music. Even our dorks and nerds had a MAHS stamp on them. If we
happened to somehow distinguish ourselves, we quickly snapped back into place,
like rubber bands.
2. Kevin was right. It was unthinkable that Stargirl could survive—or at least survive
unchanged—among us. But it was also clear that Hillari Kimble was at least half
right: this person calling herself Stargirl may or may not have been a faculty plant for
school spirit, but whatever she was, she was not real.
3. She couldn’t be.
4. Several times in those early weeks of September, she showed up in something
outrageous. A 1920s flapper dress. An Indian buckskin. A kimono. One day she
wore a denim miniskirt with green stockings, and crawling up one leg was a parade
of enamel ladybug and butterfly pins. “Normal” for her were long, floorbrushing
pioneer dresses and skirts.
5. Every few days in the lunchroom she serenaded someone new with “Happy
Birthday.” I was glad my birthday was in the summer.
6. In the hallways, she said hello to perfect strangers. The seniors couldn’t believe it.
They had never seen a tenth-grader so bold.
7. In class she was always flapping her hand in the air, asking questions, though the
question often had nothing to do with the subject. One day she asked a question
about trolls—in U.S. History class.
8. She made up a song about isosceles triangles. She sang it to her Plane Geometry
class. It was called “Three Sides Have I, But Only Two Are Equal.”
9. She joined the cross-country team. Our home meets were held on the Mica Country
Club golf course. Red flags showed the runners the way to go. In her first meet, out
in the middle of the course, she turned left when everyone else turned right. They
waited for her at the finish line. She never showed up. She was dismissed from the
team. One day a girl screamed in the hallway. She had seen a tiny brown face pop
up from Stargirl’s sunflower canvas bag. It was her pet rat. It rode to school in the
bag every day.
11. One morning we had a rare rainfall. It came during her gym class. The teacher told
everyone to come in. On the way to the next class they looked out the windows.
Stargirl was still outside. In the rain. Dancing.
12. We wanted to define her, to wrap her up as we did each other, but we could not
seem to get past “weird” and “strange” and “goofy.” Her ways knocked us off
balance. A single word seemed to hover in the cloudless sky over the school: HUH?
Everything she did seemed to echo Hillari Kimble: She’s not real . . . She’s not real .
..
13. And each night in bed I thought of her as the moon came through my window. I
could have lowered my shade to make it darker and easier to sleep, but I never did.
In that moonlit hour, I acquired a sense of the otherness of things. I liked the feeling
the moonlight gave me, as if it wasn’t the opposite of day, but its underside, its
136
private side, when the fabulous purred on my snow-white sheet like some dark cat
come in from the desert.
14. It was during one of these night moon times that it came to me that Hillari Kimble
was wrong. Stargirl was real.
Directions: Answer the following multiple-choice questions by filling in the circle for the
best answer on your answer sheet.
1. In paragraph 1 of the selection, how are students at MAHS like rubber bands?
A. They snap at each other in the hallways.
B. They like to see things change at their school.
C. When they realize they are different, they often change groups of friends.
D. When they realize they are different, they return to acting like everyone else.
2. In the first sentence what does the statement “MAHS was not exactly a hotbed of
nonconformity” mean?
A. Students had stamps on them.
B. Everyone acted any way they wanted to.
C. MAHS was not a place where students expressed their individuality.
D. The school did not want anyone to distinguish themselves.
3. In the selection, why does Hillari Kimble most likely think that Stargirl is a faculty
plant for school spirit?
A. because of Stargirl’s enthusiastic attitude
B. because Stargirl earns good grades
C. because of Stargirl’s popularity
D. because Stargirl is from a different country
4. In paragraph 4, what is considered “outrageous?”
A. decorative stockings
B. Stargirl’s style of clothing and colors
C. the appreciation for ladybugs and butterflies
D. Stargirl’s costumes
5. Paragraph 2 begins, “Kevin was right. It was unthinkable that Stargirl could survive,”
suggesting that
A. Stargirl would eventually change, conform, and do what everyone else did.
B. Something dangerous was going to happen to Stargirl.
C. Stargirl was going to snap like a rubber band.
D. Stargirl would eventually become a dork or a nerd.
6. Re-read the text from paragraph 12 in the box below. In the selection, what does the
narrator most likely mean by the comment?
A. Students were trying to ignore Stargirl.
B. Students were trying to be more like Stargirl.
C. Students were trying to understand Stargirl.
D. Students were trying to make friends with Stargirl.
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7. According to paragraph 13, why does the narrator enjoy the night?
A. He can think about things differently.
B. He has time off from school.
C. He can be by himself and reflect on his thoughts.
D. He likes the shadows created by moonlight.
8. In paragraph 13 the narrator “acquires a sense of the otherness of things” as he
thinks about the moon. What does he now understand?
A. People and things can be defined in limited ways.
B. People have unique qualities like the moon.
C. People don’t have to be what others want them to be.
D. There is more than one way to see things.
9. In paragraph 13, the phrase “when the fabulous purred” refers to
A. the narrator’s comparison of Stargirl to a cat
B. the feeling of moonlight.
C. the narrator’s cat, Fabulous.
D. an abstract comparison of sheets and cats.
10. What happens at the end of the selection?
A. The narrator changes his opinion of Stargirl.
B. The narrator decides to speak to Stargirl.
C. The narrator has a nightmare about Stargirl.
D. The narrator discovers that Stargirl is like the moon.
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Closing:
1. The student presents his/her personal narrative with visual aids to the class. In
this presentation, integration of oral presentation skills with use of visuals along
with fluency and prosody is evaluated.
Materials:
Excerpt Stargirl, by Jerry Spinelli
attachment 10.1 Learning Activity – Story Map
10.3 Performance Task – Personal Narrative Revising
Comprehension Questions:
http://www.bpe.org/
139
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Tenth
Unit: 10.4 My World
Standard and Expectation:
10. R.7L; 10.L.1a; 10.L.1c; 10.S.2a; 10.S.5; 10.W.7
Activities Theme: Inference
Theme: The Hunger Games: Gender Empowerment Lesson Plan
Subjects: English, Spanish, Social Studies
Duration: 2-3 days
Description: Katniss and Peeta demonstrate that males and females can both be
strong, vulnerable, likeable, admired and ultimately their true selves. Through
discussion of these characters, their physical attributes, personalities and behaviors,
students identify their own unique characteristics and recognize the unrealistic
limitations imposed by traditional gender stereotypes.
Purpose: The overall goal of this lesson is to teach students to be themselves and to
value others for who they really are.
Objectives: Through class discussions the students will:




Develop an understanding of the social constructs of gender and its influence.
Understand concepts of gender, gender stereotypes, and gender equality.
Identify the effects of gender stereotypes on individuals and their relationships.
Strengthen analytical and critical thinking, and literacy skills regarding gender- as
depicted in The Hunger Games and other popular culture.
Procedure:
Initial:
Definitions (for Instructor Use)
 Gender refers to the social attributes and opportunities associated with being
male and female and the relationships between women and men, as well as the
relationships between women and those between men. These attributes,
opportunities and relationships are socially constructed and are learned through
socialization processes. They are context/ time-specific and changeable.
 Gender stereotypes are generalized and/or assembled conceptualizations
about people based on gender. Stereotypes depict simplified and rigid view of
others and are centered on a limited number of characteristics. Stereotypes
create an impression that everyone in the group has the same characteristics.
Stereotypes create expectations of what males and females should look like and
how they should think, feel, and act.
140
 Gender equality means that girls and boys, women and men have equal
conditions for realizing their full human rights and for contributing to, and
benefiting from, economic, social, cultural and political development. Gender
equality is the equal valuing by society of the similarities and the differences of
each other.
Activity #1– Personality Characteristics
Using commonly recognized characters from The Hunger Games, students will be able
to identify actual characteristics of male and female characters in the story, understand
how these comply or do not comply with traditional gender stereotypes and discuss the
personal and societal value of gender equality. NOTE: The overall goal of this activity is
to educate students about gender equality, and to help them conceptualize healthy
gender roles within their own relationships.
Instructions
Give each student a Hunger Games Characteristic Sheet (not mentioned in materials
section above. Give each student a Personality Characteristics, Behaviors, and
Activities Handout. Have students work in pairs or small groups. To begin, ask each
group to select examples from the handout for each category: personality
characteristics, behaviors, and activities. Each character can have similar qualities and
the words can be used more than once.
After students have completed The Hunger Games Character Sheet, introduce the idea
that gender is socially constructed. [Tip: post pre-printed term definition sheet for
Gender for student reference.] Explain that books, movies, music and videos influence
our understanding of gender - how to look, act, dress, and relate to others can be a
source that contributes to this composition.
Development:
Class Discussion Questions - Gender and Gender Stereotypes
 Ask students to share the characteristics, behaviors, or activities they assigned to
Katniss and Peeta.
 Ask students to differentiate between stereotypical characteristics and
characteristics that do not conform to traditional gender stereotypes (i.e. Katniss
“acting” to show the audience that she is in love with Peeta (stereotypical) versus
Katniss prowess as a hunter (non-stereotypical).
 Ask students to look at the many characters in “Hunger Games” and assess
which are conforming (i.e. Glimmer and Cato) and non-conforming to gender
stereotypes (i.e. Katniss and Peeta).
 HIGH SCHOOL Handout: Ask students how the characteristics, behaviors,
and/or activities changed depending on the situation the character was in? Why
or why not?
141
Closing
Class Discussion Questions - Popular Culture
Explain to students how novels and other forms of popular culture can support a
healthier and more holistic notion of masculinity and femininity by illustrating the full
range of personal characteristics among both male and female characters.
 Ask students how they think authors, artists, and musicians might contribute to
the social construction of gender. How does popular culture pressure young
people to conform to traditional gender stereotypes vs. expressing their true
selves?
 Ask how it would feel if more characters in books or popular culture were free to
display a full range of characteristics, those that fit into traditional gender
stereotypes and those that may not?
 How could books and movies contribute to a more holistic and realistic social
construction of gender?”
Activity #2 –Character Quotes
Write each of the following quotes at the top of each piece of paper or a whiteboard.
Record student’s responses to the questions that follow, under each character’s name:
 Katniss Everdeen “It was slow-going at first, but I was determined to feed us. I
stole eggs from nests, caught fish in nets, sometimes managed to shoot a
squirrel or rabbit for stew, and gathered the various plants that sprung up
beneath my feet. Plants are tricky. Many are edible, but one false mouthful and
you’re dead. I checked and double-checked the plants I harvested with my
father’s pictures. I kept us alive.”
 Peeta Mellark “We were five. You had a plaid dress and your hair...it was in two
braids instead of one. …’ So that day, in music assembly, the teacher asked who
knew the valley song. Your hand shot right up in the air. She put you up on a
stool and had you sing it for us. And I swear, ever bird outside the windows fell
silent. And right when your song ended, I knew - just like your mother- I was a
goner.”
After reading the quotes aloud from Katniss and Peeta, ask the students the following
questions to generate discussion.
Class Discussion Questions – Students own experience and impact on
relationships
 What personality traits and behaviors do not conform to gender stereotypes?
 Does either of these characters remind you of yourself, someone you know?
 Do you have personal characteristics that conform and characteristics that do not
necessarily conform to traditional gender stereotypes? Would you like to share
them with the class?
Class Discussion or Break into Small Group Discussion Questions
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You can give an option for groups to discuss and report back to the class to engage
more students or continue as whole class discussion.
 How does it feel to read about characters who display such a full range of
behaviors, activities and physical attributes including ones that might be
considered outside of traditional gender stereotypes?
 Are these characters appealing? Why or why not?
 How to do you think characters like Katniss and/or Peeta contribute to or change
our social construction of gender - or the way we think about gender?
 What is it like to look at male and female roles in a new and expanded way?
 What are some of the ways that traditional gender stereotypes affect individuals,
relationships, families, and society?
 What role does gender play in your relationships with friends and dating
partners? How does it affect who you are and who you date?
 What would change for us as individuals, in our relationships and in our society if
men and women could be equally strong and equally vulnerable?
Closure to Lesson
Katniss and Peeta are equally strong, but in different ways. In a world where Katniss is
skilled, confident, and a rescuer and Peeta is emotionally expressive, caring, and
vulnerable – each person is free to be their true selves. Men and women take control
over their own lives. Katniss and Peeta and the other characters pursue their own goals,
live according to their own values, develop self-reliance, and are able to make choices
and influence - both individually and collectively - the decisions that affect their lives.
Being free to express your true self is critical to becoming a healthy individual and
achieving a healthy relationship.
Assessment:
Check the intro paragraphs for effective elements taught in the lesson.
Materials:
Paper
Projector, Info includes: 1) Key Elements in an Introduction 2) Hooks (Grabs Attention
and Provides Background) and Statement (Topic + Position) 3) Examples of Effective
Introductions.
Handouts for each student or pairs of students – (middle school)
Personality Characteristics or (High School) Personality Characteristics (high school) at
a specific point in time in the story
2- Large pieces of white paper or a white board and markers
Optional – Definitions handout
Reference:
Patti, Bellan, MA, Malia Collins, MFA, and Josie Fretwell, MA (2012). Idaho Coalition
Against Sexual & Domestic Violence Center for Healthy Teen Relationships and
Start
Strong
Idaho
Team.
Retrieved
from:
http://idvsa.org/wpcontent/uploads/2013/01/Hunger-Games-and-Gender-Equality.pdf
143
Appendix A
Personality Characteristics
List the top six most important personality characteristics, for each character.
Compassionate
Brave
Rational
Passive
Nurturing
Active
Sensitive
Emotionally expressive
Intuitive
Ambitious
Detailed
Dominant
Graceful
Courageous
Adventurous
Masculine
Understanding
Responsible
Katniss
1.
Independent
Pragmatic
Assertive
Strong
Clever
Competitive
Intelligent
Communicative
Weak
Competent
Cooperative
Timid
Aggressive
Muscular
Cheerful
Feminine
Self-sufficient
Reliable
2.
2.
3.
3.
4.
4.
5.
5.
6.
6.
Peeta
1.
144
Appendix B
Select the characteristics that best describe Katniss and Peeta at different points
in the story (Before Reaping, Television Interviews, and During the Games).
Peacemaker
Characteristics
Rescuer
Archery
Intelligent
Rescued
Cake frosting
Independent
Assertive
Bread baking
Determined
Nurturer
Fashion Design
Rebel
Strategic
Hunting
Affectionate
Cries
Selling
Adventurous
Yells
Buying
Self-reliant
Mediator
Reading
Competitive
Emotional
Painting
Brave
Risk taker
Knot tying
Goal-oriented
Caregiver
Weight lifting
Cooperative
Fights
Household Chores
Caring
Protector
Makeup artist
Confident
Risk-taker
Caretaker
Responsible
Appendix C
Character Before Reaping
Katniss
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Peeta
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Television Interview
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
During the Games
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
145
Appendix D
Optional Extension - Writing Activity
The Hunger Games characters exemplify people who display a full range of
characteristics and as such, do not conform to traditional gender stereotypes. Are these
characters compelling because they seem consistent with socialized norms – or
because they embody a radical departure from the norms - within the Hunger Games
society? I.e., a society dedicated to death-match competition for resources?
Write a character portrait the demonstrates a full range of characteristics! Have the
students respond to the following questions. Start with the basics:





What is your character’s name?
How old is the character?
Is this person a boy or a girl?
Where does your character live?
What is your character’s family situation?
Think about your character’s personality for the following questions:
 What is your character like?
 What do they do on the weekend?
 What is your character proud of?
 What makes your character feel embarrassed?
 Two things your character wants.
 Two things your character fears.
 One secret your character has.

Encourage students to be specific. Then, after the characters are created, ask the
students what kind of story they’d like to read about this person. Have volunteers share
their character portraits.
146
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Subject: English
Grade: Tenth
Unit: 10.5 Create
PRCS: 10.L.1b 10.L.1d 10.LA.3a 10.LA.4 10.LA.5 10.LA.5a 10.LA.5b 10.R.10 10.R.4L
10.R.6L 10.W.3 10.W.7 10.W.8
Theme: Fear on Gender Bias
Duration: 120 min
Description: Through poems the student explores fear of gender bias.
Purpose: Identifying and recognizing fear that gender bias can induce
Objective: After reading the poem the student will list strategies to overcome gender
bias and stereotyping by:
1. Recognizing the fear that gender bias can induce.
2. Identifying specific fears that challenge an individual in terms of discrimination
and stereotyping.
3. Recognizing their own biases and their own fears and how they might overcome
their own fears of gender bias.
4. Listing ways in which the tone of Maya Angelou’s poem reveals the fear of the
speaker in the poem.
Procedures:
Initial:
1. Begin by asking students to write down some of their own beliefs about what
boys and girls are generally afraid of. List five or ten fears, if possible.
2. Have class silently read Angelou’s poem.
3. Read the poem aloud to them.
Development:
1. Use the "Questions for discussion" that follow the poem to:
2. Review comprehension and discuss concepts in the poem.
3. Explore gender bias and stereotypes about what males and females fear in life.
4. Have students compare Maya Angelou’s fears to their own (what they listed in
step 1, above).
5. Discuss the question: Are any of these fears gender specific?
6. Discuss: What do your assumptions mean to you? Does the poem convince you
that certain biased, gender-based fears are not what you think they may be?
Closing:
1. ASSESSMENTS: Students will demonstrate their understandings of the concepts
and assumptions about fears in the following ways:
2. Listing 5-10 fears that they may have.
3. Being able to compare or contrast their listed fears to those in the poem.
4. Being able to determine whether any of these fears are gender specific.
147
5. Being able to participate in a discussion about: the impacts of assumptions about
fears being gender specific.
6. Are there any things in the poem that indicate how girls fear boys? Or, how boys
fear girls?
7. How do boys and girls, respectively, compensate for their fears of each other?
8. How do these fears impact relationships between the sexes?
9. How do we cope with our own fears in positive ways?
10. Can these fears provoke violence?
Materials:
Copy of Angelou’s poem, "Life doesn’t frighten me."
Student Journals
http://www.ricw.ri.gov/lessons/143.htm#LIFE%20DOESN%E2%80%99T%20FRIGHTE
N%20ME
148
LIFE DOESN’T FRIGHTEN ME
By: Maya Angelou
Shadows on the wall
Noises down the hail
Life doesn’t frighten me at all
Bad dogs barking loud
Big ghosts in a cloud
Life doesn’t frighten me at all.
Mean old Mother Goose
Lions on the loose
They don’t frighten me at all
Dragons breathing flame
On my counterpane
That doesn’t frighten me at all.
I go boo
Make them shoo
I make fun
Way they run
I won’t cry
So they fly
I just smile
They go wild
Life doesn’t frighten me at all.
Tough guys in a fight
All alone at night
Life doesn’t frighten me at all.
Panthers in the park
Strangers in the dark
No, they don’t frighten me at all.
That new classroom where
Boys pull all my hair
(Kissy little girls
With their hair in curls)
They don’t frighten me at all.
Don’t show me frogs and snakes
And listen for my scream,
If I’m afraid at all
It’s only in my dreams.
I’ve got a magic charm
That I keep up my sleeve,
149
I can walk the ocean floor
And never have to breathe.
Life doesn’t frighten me at all
Not at all
Not at all
Life doesn’t frighten me at all.
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION:
1. What kind of stance does the speaker take against her fears in life?
2. How does she deal with them?
3. Do you see her conquering her fears or denying that she is actually afraid of
them?
4. If she is in fact not afraid, why do you think this is so?
5. Should she be afraid of the things listed in the poem?
6. Why does she strongly refuse to be afraid of these things in life?
7. What would it make her if she actually was afraid of any of these things? Would
she be fitting a stereotype or a gender biased opinion?
8. Do you find it interesting or even surprising that these things do not frighten the
speaker? Why or Why not?
9. What is the speaker saying about boys and girls her age in the fifth stanza? Should they frighten her? Do you think she fits in with them?
10. Besides her saying so repeatedly, what else can you point out as evidence of her
fearlessness in the poem?
11. Would anything in this poem frighten you? Be honest.
12. Did Angelou’s apparent fearlessness towards the things in the poem contradict
what you think females are generally frightened of? Look at what you wrote
down. Can you say exactly why she refuses to fear these things? Why must she
let us know?
150
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class: English
Eleventh Grade
Unit:
11.1 Memoir –My Point of View
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
11.L.1c
11.W.8
Topic of the activity: Create awareness of the need and importance of educating girls
and supporting the cause of girl’s education around the world.
Duration: 45 minutes
Description: Learn about the education of girls in other parts of the world and an
activist of this cause -Malala Yousafzai.
Purpose: Students will learn the importance of supporting the education of girls in
other parts of the world. Students will get to know who Malala Yousafzai and her impact
on the support of educating girls in Pakistan and the world.
Objectives: Students will through the viewing of a PowerPoint presentation and a
documentary become aware of the state of girls’ education in the global context.
Activities:
Initial: Students will brainstorm about how they benefit from a high-quality
education. Instruct students to stand up if they think all individuals should have access
to a quality education (they should all stand). The boys will then sit down, and the girls
will remain standing. Now ask the girls to count off, 1, 2, 3. Ask only the number 1s to sit
down and the number 2s and number 3s remain standing. Reveal that the girls who
sat down represent the fact that only one-third of girls in Pakistan have access to
primary school education. The two-thirds who remain standing represent those unable
to attend school.
Developing: The students will view the Girl’s Education PowerPoint
presentation. The teacher will then clarify doubts presented from the PowerPoint
presentation and have a short class discussion. Then she will present to students the
Time documentary video about the activist Malala Yousafzai. Students will be paired up
and asked to complete the 11.1 Crisis in Girl’s Education Worksheet. After ten to fifteen
minutes the teacher will conduct a class discussion where students will share their
thoughts.
Closing:. Students will be asked to come up with ideas of how to support Malala and
her cause around the world. They will be assigned an essay to express their ideas. (It
can be completed and handed in on the next day to be discussed in class.)
151
Materials:
Girl’s Education PowerPoint Presentation
Video from Time Documentaries, The Making of Malala
11.1 Crisis in Girl’s Education Worksheet
152
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class: English
Eleventh Grade
Unit: 11.2 Identity Personal Narrative
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
11. R.1
11. R.10
Topic of the activity: Expose students to the life of Malala Yousafzai through a memoir
extract and Glamour magazine article.
Duration: 40 minutes
Description: Read a memoir extract and a biographical article to compare the styles of
each in their approach in presenting the life of Malala Yousafzai.
Purpose: Students will learn about the life, beliefs, and struggles of Malala Yousafzai
an activist for girls’ access to education around the world.
Objective: Through the reading students will through the reading of Malala Yousafzai’s
memoir extract and the Glamour magazine article the students will identify the ideas
and conclusion from the readings.
Activities:
Initial: The teacher will complete a KWL chart about Malala and Pakistan. The
teacher will utilize a map to identify Pakistan’s location in contrast to the location of
Puerto Rico. The teacher will also supply context as to the population, religion, and
type of government present in Pakistan.
Developing: Then they will be given a copy of the Glamour magazine article.
Students will read it together and pick out the characteristics of Malala the activist and
her message. Then they will read the extract from I am Malala. Students will be divided
into groups and will work on identifying the differences between the two texts analyzing
the point of view of each and the language used to express their ideas and culture.
Closing: Students will present their groups’ thoughts in a class discussion and
discuss what they have learned, what could they do to support girls’ education, and how
Malala an activist for educating girls around the world.
Materials:
Article from Glamour Magazine, The Malala Effect: Her Global Fight for Girls’ Rights,
http://www.glamour.com/inspired/2014/09/malala-yousafzai-activist-womens-rights
Extract from I Am Malala by Malala Yousafzai,
https://www.orionbooks.co.uk/assets/OrionPublishingGroup/downloads/Extracts/I-AmMalala-by-Malala-Yousafzai-and-Christina-Lamb-Extract.pdf
153
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class:
English
Grade:
Eleventh
Unit:
11.3 As I See It - Persuasion
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
Topic of the activity: Gender roles and relationships
Duration: 45 minutes
Description: An exercise to evaluate gender roles and how it affects or impact
relationship.
Purpose: Students will learn to examine how gender roles affect relationships
Objectives: After reading their group study case, analyzing and orally discussing
possible solutions students will be able to exchange opinions and comprehend how
gender roles affect relationships with their peers during whole group discussions.
Activities:
Initial: Explain to teens that stereotypes about gender roles can affect our
relationships. Explain that this activity will explore situations where gender roles and
stereotypes might affect teens' goals, decisions, and relationships.
Developing: Divide participants into small groups and go over instructions for the
activity: Each small group will receive a case study involving issues of gender roles.
Work to resolve your case study, then prepare to present your solution. You will have 10
minutes. When you present your solution, others can challenge it while you defend it.
Be sure to have convincing reasons to back up your solution.
When time is up, ask for a volunteer to present the case study and its solution. Then
invite any challenges. Arguments are okay as long as the group sticks to the ground
rules. Allow 'debate' to go on for two or three minutes, assisting either side as
appropriate, before moving on to another small group. Repeat the process until the
entire group discusses and debates all case studies.
Closing: Conclude the activity using the Discussion Points below and then assign the
students to write an Opinion for a newspaper article based on their experience in this
activity.
1. Is it easy or hard to look at male and female roles in a new and nontraditional
way? Why or why not?
154
2. How do men or women accept changes in traditional gender roles? Why?
3. What are some of the ways changing gender roles have affected relationships
between men and women in a) social settings, b) families, and c) the workplace?
4. Would your parents reach the same or different solutions?
5. Which case study was the most difficult? Why?
6. If you could make one change in men's gender roles, what would it be? In
women's roles, what would it be?
Materials or Resources:
http://testyourself.psychtests.com/testid/2435
Gender Roles Case Studies handout pdf
155
Leader's Resource for Gender Roles and Relationships Lesson Plan
Gender Roles Case Studies for Activity
1. Travis is about to ask Michelle out for the first time when she walks over to him and
says, "Travis, there's a new movie in town and I really want to see it. I was hoping
you would go with me. Are you busy Saturday night?" Travis has no plans, and he
was hoping to take Michelle to the movie, but he wants to do the asking. He thinks
he'll say he's busy. What can Travis say or do?
2. Charlene has been offered a special grant to apprentice with a master plumber after
graduation. She's excited, and she rushes to tell John. They've been planning to get
married in the fall, and this way, she'll be able to start earning good money. John is
very quiet after Charlene tells him. Finally, he says, "I don't think I can marry a
plumber, Charlene. You're going to have to make a choice—me or being a plumber."
What might Charlene do?
3. Sam wants to buy a doll for his nephew's birthday, but his friend, José, says, "No
way!" Sam explains that dolls help teach little boys to take care of someone and be
loving, but José argues that they just teach boys to be sissies. Sam knows he is
right, but he's concerned about what José might say to their friends. What might
Sam do?
4. Serena and Fernando have been going out for months, and things have been good
between them. Her parents approve of him, and the word is out around school that
she is his girl. However, lately Fernando has been putting a lot of pressure on
Serena for more than she is ready for. When she says, "No," he says that it's her
place as a woman to please him. What can Serena say to him?
5. Shaudra and Malcolm are arguing about their sister, Patricia, and her husband,
Robert. Shaundra has noticed lots of bruises on Patricia's arms and shoulders
recently, and this weekend she had a black eye. Malcolm says Patricia has been too
"uppity" lately and their brother-in-law is trying to show her who's boss. Shaundra
looks at Malcolm and shakes her head. She doesn't think violence is ever an
answer. What might Shaundra say?
6. Keisha has decided to have sexual intercourse with her boyfriend, Tony. She says
they really love each other. She stops at the drugstore to buy condoms, and her
friend, Tanya, says, "Girls can't buy condoms! That's a guy's business to do." What
might Keisha say and do?
156
7. Susan and Michael have been going together for almost a year. Michael always
pays for everything and makes most of the decisions about where to go and what to
do. In Susan's health class, they talked about girls paying for dates and having some
say about a couple's plans. Both Susan and Michael have part-time jobs and earn
very little money, so pooling their funds seems to make sense to Susan; but Michael
is furious at the idea. He says she doesn't think he is man enough to pay for her.
What might Susan say to Michael?
Adapted from Life Planning Education, a comprehensive sex education curriculum.
Washington, DC: Advocates for Youth.
157
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
(Activity 4 for eleventh grade)
Class:
English
Grade:
Eleventh
Unit:
Unit 11.5: Historical Fiction Using Informational Text
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
11. R.10
11.R.2I
11.W.7
Topic of the activity: Gender Based Violence
Duration: 50 minutes
Description: The exploration of the opinion and point of view of diverse authors will be
conducted through the reading of various texts about gender based violence.
Purpose: Build a common understanding of the connection between inequality and
gender violence.
Objectives: Students will learn about the connections between gender inequality and
gender based violence through the readings in class.
Activities:
Initial: The teacher will read a definition of gender violence to students. The
teacher will explain how research shows girls and women are more impacted by gender
violence. Then select and view a video from the web page
http://photos.state.gov/libraries/mumbai... The class will discuss the video viewed and
the gender violence present in the video.
Developing: Then the class will read and discuss a text selected from the same
web page. The teacher should allow time for a class discussion after reading the text.
Then students will write an individual reflection with their opinion and support on the
topic and what they learned focusing on inequality and gender violence.
Closing: If time allows, have students research for local statistics about gender
violence in their area. Have them present and discuss raising awareness benefits and
the programs in place to help prevent gender violence.
Materials:
http://photos.state.gov/libraries/mumbai/101165/March%202013/GBV%20eInfopack%2
0Nov%202014.pdf
158
Gender Inequality in the United States: A Modern Issue
By Emily Pearce, Mamanding Nasso, and Carlee Russell
WORKSHEET #1
Name:_______________________________ Date:____________________________
Instructions: View the video and fill in the blanks with facts from the video.
1. The First Women’s Rights Convention was held in ________ ________, New York in
1848.
2. Women were granted the right to vote with the _______ Amendment to the
Constitution in the year _________.
3. In 1948 women were allowed to serve as regular permanent members of the
_____________ ______________.
4. The Federal Equal Pay Act was enacted in ____________.
5. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act prohibits ________________ discrimination and it was
passed in ____________.
6. Married couples were able to use birth control in family planning after the Supreme
Court legalized it in _________.
7. In 1972 Congress passed Title ______ of the Education Amendment requiring
federally funded schools to give women equal _________to all school programs.
8. The Supreme Court legalized a woman’s right to reproductive choice in ______.
9. The Pregnancy Discrimination Act was established in ______ prohibiting employment
discrimination against pregnant women.
10. The ERA stands for ___________ ________________ ____________________ it
was not passed in 1982 because three states did not ratify it.
11. For every dollar ($1.00) a man earns a woman performing the same job earns
__________ (___________).
12. How many women are in the 113th United States Congress (2013-2015)? ________
Of 535
13. How many women are in state office? _______ women out of 320 state positions.
14. The Supreme Court of the US made it illegal for state supported military schools to
no longer discriminate against women in the ________.
15. The Defense Secretary Leon Panetta allowed women to serve as combat troops in
the ________.
159
Topics
Women’s Suffrage
Women in Business
Laws and Women’s Rights
Women in Government
The ERA
Women in the Military
160
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class:
Grade:
Unit:
English
Eleventh
11.6 Create! (Poetry)
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
11.L.1c
11.L.1d
11.S.4
Topic of the activity: Gender Violence
Duration: 45 minutes
Description: Songs can present messages and raise awareness about social issues
such as gender violence. By listening to and identifying messages in songs about
gender violence, students will become aware of how popular music contains messages
for social change as well as be entertaining.
Purpose: Develop awareness of gender violence messages present in popular music.
Objectives: Students will listen to popular songs and identify the gender violence
messages present as well as identify the singer’s opinion.
Activities:
Initial: The teacher will discuss how gender violence is present in some very
popular songs. She will give instructions to students that as they listen to songs they
will write down lyrics that stand out for them or the message the singer is trying to
convey. Then she will select some songs from the webpages listed in the materials
sections and have students listen to them.
Developing: Students will listen to songs and write down the point of view,
message, and point of the song. Students should also write any lyrics they feel stand
out for them. After listening to the songs, the students will discuss their impressions
about the songs heard, the message conveyed about gender violence, and their
feelings listening to each one.
Closing: The teacher should hold a class discussion about how music can
promote a message about gender violence and the importance of reporting domestic
violence. The teacher will present on a projector or with a handout the local statistics of
domestic violence and the contact information to report domestic violence from the
webpage http://www.mujer.pr.gov/
Materials:
http://16days.thepixelproject.net/the-pixel-project-selection-2011-16-songs-aboutviolence-against-women-and-staying-strong-and-positive/
http://www.bet.com/music/photos/2012/08/music-vs-domesticviolence.html?cid=rss#!051012-music-pink
http://www.mujer.pr.gov/
161
162
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class:
English
Twelfth Grade
Unit:
12.1 My Journey So Far
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
12.W.3
12.R.10
12.LA.2
Topic of the activity: Opinions and feelings about the opposite sex
Duration: 2 days
Description: The Other Gender is…opinions and feelings concerning the “opposite”
sex.
Purpose: This is a student writing-based activity that explores preconceptions,
attitudes, and anxieties concerning the "opposite" gender. Discussion is stimulated by
student reading of personal narratives.
Objective: After discussing the opinions about opposite gender, the student will write
an essay about personal and cultural attitudes toward other gender with the teacher’s
guidance.
Activities:
Initial: Ask the student to write their feelings and opinions about the "opposite"
gender. Give a required length to insure some thought and uniformity for reading time
when used as a classroom activity. Example: 150 words. The student may want to
consider the following questions in their essays:
In what ways are you different from other students in your class?
How are you the same as other students in your class?
Is friendship with the other gender different from same gender friendship? How
and why?
Do you change your actions and activities when you’re in the presence of the
other gender? How and why?
Then separate students according to gender for presentation of essays. Each student
reads his/her paper to the class and have listeners respond in two ways:
A. Write a short response to the reader.
B. Offer verbal responses. Ask students to find points they agree with. Explain that
responses and viewpoints need to be kept positive.
163
Developing: Bring class back together. Have students volunteer to read their
essays. Allow free discussion. Ask students to consider the following: Was the
discussion different with the whole class present? Why or why not?
At the end of the discussion, ask students for positive statements about the other
gender and record them on the board under male or female headings. Point out
commonalities. Ask students to list the statements that could be switched to other
gender column.
Closing: Student writing may be assessed in terms of effort, creativity, content,
and style. Speaking and listening skills may be noted during oral presentations and
subsequent discussions.
Materials:
Use student’s narratives as material for this activity.
164
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class:
English
Grade:
Twelfth
Unit:
12.2 Walking into the Future
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
12.S.1
12.S.6
12.L.1
12.W.4
Duration: 45 minutes
Description: In this activity students explore gender roles in advertising by taking an
ad campaign they have seen, which is specifically directed to one gender, and
redesigning the campaign to target the opposite gender.
Purpose: Create awareness about gender stereotypes and the designing of
advertisements.
Objectives: After analyzing the definition of stereotypes, student will designed an
advertisement avoiding stereotypes satisfactorily.
Activities:
Initial:
Advertisers create campaigns directed at girls that are different from
campaigns directed at boys. Often an ad will tell you whether a product is something
“masculine” or “feminine,” even though the product could be used by either gender.
This activity explores some of the ways advertisements tell us which gender a product is
being marketed towards attracting. Begin by asking students for a definition of
“stereotypes.” (Stereotypes are assumptions we make about people based on
generalizations about groups of people.) Have them write their answers on paper.
1. What are some common gender stereotypes associated with guys and girls? (For
example, guys are “tough and aggressive” and girls are “sweet and passive.”)
2. Do students believe these gender stereotypes to be accurate?
3. Where do they think these gender stereotypes come from?
Have a class discussion and let students express their opinions and attitudes in
response to the three questions.
Developing: If possible, show students the video, “Gender Making in Moonsand”
(available on YouTube at httpp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zgdj5FXOOp8.) Ask
students to identify ways in which the two commercials for the same product are
different: examples are colors, music, tone of voice, gender of the narrator, suggested
activities (building and knocking things down in the first commercial, molding shapes in
the second one.) Who is each commercial aimed at? How do you know?
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Divide the class into groups of four or five students. (Each group will have a large piece
of paper and some marker.)
Explain to each group that they need to think of a product that is advertised specifically
to either girls or boys.
Ask students to design an ad that would appeal to the opposite gender. For example,
we’ve all seen Doritos ads on TV for years they have been directed at teenage boys.
Imagine what these ads would be like if McCain decided to shift its focus and try to sell
Doritos to teenage girls. Students have to consider what type of ad they would create,
what techniques they would use to reach a particular gender and where they would
place the ad in order to reach their target market (ie. For girls, advertisements would be
placed in girls’ magazines or during popular shows like Pretty Little Liars, Vampire
Diaries and 90210.)
Ask students to create an outline and storyboard for a TV commercial or a print ad
campaign. They only have five minutes, so ask them to illustrate their ideas in quick
sketches to be able to explain them verbally to the class. Also, have them decide
during which shows, or in which magazines this ad would appear. (If you have more
time, students can develop their ad campaigns more fully.)
Closing:
Have each group explain their work to the rest of the class. Questions for discussion:
1. How is marketing to guys different to marketing to girls?
2. Does gender-based marketing reinforce stereotypes?
3. What types of ads appeal to both sexes?
If time permits, allow students to fully develop their campaigns and present the finished
product to the class.
Materials:
Paper and markers
Video from YouTube, httpp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zgdj5FXOOp8
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class:
English
Grade:
Twelfth
Unit:
12.4 Then and Now
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
12.L.1
12.L.1d
12.W.7
Topic of the activity: Gender Inequality in the United States
Duration: 50 minutes
Description: Students learn about Women’s Rights History, Laws and create posters
highlighting their group’s selected topic.
Purpose: The student will learn the history and laws regarding women’s rights.
Research a topic and investigate it further. Create a poster with information learned
about their topic.
Objectives: After watching the video, Gender Inequality in the United States: A Modern
Issue, the student will write a reaction paper appropriately.
Activities:
Initial: The teacher will present the topic, and give Worksheet #1 handout to the
student and instruct them to complete it while they view the video. In class, the student
will view the thirteen to fourteen minute video and complete the worksheet.
Developing: The teacher will discuss the answers to the completed Worksheet
#1 and conduct a class discussion based on the video clarifying doubts or answering
questions. The student will react, reflect and respond to what was seen during a short
class discussion to prompt their thoughts. The student will then write a two hundred
word (minimum) write a reaction paper expressing their thoughts and feelings on the
video.
Closing: The teacher will divide the students into groups of four to five. Each
group will select a topic from the bottom of the worksheet. As a group, they will
research for facts, pictures, and information about their topic to create a poster to be
completed as homework to present to class. The posters will be presented to the class
and hung on the walls in class or in the hallways.
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Materials:
Pdf handout –Worksheet #1
Video on Vimeo, Gender Inequality in United States: A Modern Issue by
https://vimeo.com/68747994
Poster board
Crayons, colored pencils, markers
Glue
Scissors
Pictures
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Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class:
English
Grade:
Twelfth
Unit:
12.5 See It My Way
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
12.R.5l
12.R.6l
12.W.1a
Topic of the activity: Gender Equity in the Puerto Rico Public Schools System
Duration: 45 minutes
Description: An awareness and informative activity of the public policy in the Puerto
Rico Public School System and its implementation.
Purpose: Inform students about the Circular Letter #19-2014-2015 and public opinion
on the subject.
Objectives: After the students discuss the concept of gender perspective, the student
will present orally his or her arguments of the article on the implementation of gender
perspective in public schools appropriately.
Activities:
Before the activity students will be asked to set aside any opinion on the topic and
analyze the article to see how convincing or persuasive it is. Students should be given
the expectation that they might or might not find the article persuasive. Students should
identify language they find lends itself to being persuasive or vague.
Initial: Students will be divided into groups of four to five students. In each
group students will get a copy of the article Gender Perspective Comes to Puerto Rico’s
Public School System, from https://globalvoicesonline.org/2015/03/10/genderperspective-comes-to-puerto-ricos-public-school-system/. Each student will read the
article. Students will then be given fifteen minutes to discuss their opinion on the article
and analyze the arguments in the article in favor of the implementation of gender
perspective in school. They will decide in each group if the article has convinced them.
Then each group will have one member present the opinion of the group and give the
support for their opinion.
Developing: Each student will be given fifteen minutes to reflect in writing on
their opinion and what they agree or disagree with regarding gender equity in the public
schools. Their opinion and support should try to persuade the reader.
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Closing: Finally, each student will have a copy of the Circular letter #19-2014-2015
issued by the Department of Education of Puerto Rico. In class, the circular letter will
be read and understanding clarified as the reading takes place through a concurrent
question and answer session.
Materials:
Department of Education, Circular letter 19-2014-2015 titled “Política Pública Sobre la
Equidad de Genero…”
https://globalvoicesonline.org/2015/03/10/gender-perspective-comes-to-puerto-ricospublic-school-system/
170
Activity Guide
Gender Equity Curriculum
Class:
English
Grade:
Twelfth
Unit:
12.6 Poetic Justice
Puerto Rico Core Standards (PRCS):
12.L.1c
12.S.1
12.W.8
Topic of the activity: Gender equality
Duration: 45 minutes
Description: Students study gender equality as seen through poetry and create a
PowerPoint presentation that enhances their poems and then display their
presentations as they read their poems aloud.
Purpose: Learn about gender equality through the listening, reading, and creating of a
poem with a multimedia presentation based on their opinion about gender equality.
Objective: After listening and reading to various poems, the student will write a poem
with a gender equality message and present it to the class.
Activities:
Initial: The teacher will read aloud various poems with a gender equality
message. After reading each one the teacher will have a brief class discussion on the
poem’s message and the poet’s opinion on the topic. The following website can be used
as
a
resource
for
gender
equality
poems,
http://poemspoetryrhymes.blogspot.com/2013/08/poem-on-gender-equality.html
Developmental: Then the student will write a poem with a gender equality message
they wish to express.
Closing: The student will for homework choose art, photos, sound, quotes, and
so on to create a multimedia presentation. The next day the student will read their poem
out loud and display the slide show presentation as they recite their poem.
Materials:
Poems to be read out loud
Computer with PowerPoint software or similar
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